The latest driver releases from AMD and NVIDIA both add official support for a new 'hardware accelerated GPU scheduling' feature found in Windows 10 version 2004 (May 2020 Update). This is not ...
Hardware-Accelerated GPU Scheduling (HAGS) is a feature introduced in Windows 10 in May 2020 and has continued into Windows 11. It's often touted as a feature that you should turn on or turn off ...
With the Windows 10 May 2020 Update, Microsoft introduced a new GPU scheduler as an opt-in, and off by default, toggle button in graphics settings. This is the Hardware Accelerated GPU Scheduling ...
The big picture: Support for hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling is now starting to form at the driver level, with both Nvidia and AMD rolling out drivers that green light the feature, leaving Intel ...
The latest driver releases from AMD and NVIDIA both add official support for a new 'hardware accelerated GPU scheduling' feature found in Windows 10 version 2004 (May 2020 Update). This is not ...
I was wondering how many people actually use this feature intentionally, on my RTX 2060 Super 8G I use it specifically for the gpu clocks to lower to 300mhz-700mhz(memclock 400mhz-800mhz) so that my ...
Hardware-accelerated GPU scheduling is here as of the Windows 10 May Update, and it promises a modest boost to your graphics card's performance - though the jury is still out on how much that ...
Nvidia has released the GeForce Game Ready driver version 451.48 and with it comes highly anticipated support for DirectX 12 support, and the Windows 10 2004 GPU Scheduling feature. With this release, ...
The new Windows 10 2004 feature reduces latency caused by buffering between the CPU and GPU. AMD this week added support for GPU scheduling in its Radeon Software Adrenalin 2020 Edition 20.5.1 Beta ...
Hardware acceleration uses specialized hardware components of your computer to perform certain tasks more efficiently than the system’s main processor (CPU) alone could. This is particularly useful ...
The processor of current PCs is usually powerful enough to work smoothly with all types of content. However, some processes put a higher load on the processor — for example, when you watch videos.