![]() Highest possible frequency is strongly recommended. Since an integrated GPU uses system RAM as its video memory (VRAM), our memory requirement in this configuration is higher. Recommended: Intel Iris Xe Graphics / AMD Radeon 680M / Qualcomm Adreno 740 / ARM Mali G720 Minimum for Android: Qualcomm Adreno 605 (with Turnip drivers) / ARM Mali G57 Minimum for Windows: Intel UHD Graphics 730 / AMD Radeon Vega 3 Minimum for Linux: Intel HD Graphics 4400 / AMD Radeon R5 Graphics A dedicated GPU will produce better results on all scenarios. Integrated graphics will produce very low performance. Optimal: NVIDIA Geforce RTX 3060 12GB / AMD Radeon RX 6700 10GB (with “Force maximum clocks” enabled) Recommended: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1660 6GB / AMD Radeon RX 5500 8GB (with “Force maximum clocks” enabled) / Adreno Minimum for Windows: NVIDIA GeForce GT 1050 4GB / AMD Radeon RX 550 4GB Minimum for Linux: NVIDIA GeForce GT 1050 4GB / AMD Radeon R7 240 4GB Half-float support and VP9 decoding support are recommended. OpenGL 4.6 or Vulkan 1.1 compatible hardware and drivers are mandatory. Optimal: Intel Core i9-13900K / AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D / Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 Recommended: Intel Core i5-11400 / AMD Ry/ Qualcomm Snapdragon 865 Minimum: Intel Core i5-4430 / AMD Ry/ Qualcomm Snapdragon 460 Since NVIDIA doesn't have an apparent way to unmap the key combination, overriding seems to be the easiest free solution available.įor another easy, but not free solution, there is Hotkey Commander.Any x86_64 CPU with support for the FMA instruction set, or an ARM64-v8a or newer CPU. Replace the class CLASS_GOES_HERE with the class given to you by Window Spy. The Window Spy utility that comes with Autohotkey can tell you the window class if you simply hover over the window while it's running. The basic syntax would be similar to this: ^!h::ĬontrolSend, ahk_parent, ^!h, ahk_class CLASS_GOES_HERE Using Autohotkey you can capture the key combination and ControlSend can override it's current functionality and send it to a specific application or window, instead of NVIDIA's application. I've noticed this too, and I've also found your thread on the NVIDIA forums.Īn easy free solution, depending on what you intend to assign the hotkey to, is to use Autohotkey's function called ControlSend. I've appealed the issue in the nVidia user forums, but the only reply I got indicated my 'issue' was not of interest to the largely gamer-focused user group. I've tried unloading, not letting load and disabling services I associate with nVidia. The nView utility doesn't list ANY hotkeys, let alone the bothersome one. ![]() However I have failed miserably in locating the place to delete or change this hotkey. I need that hotkey for something else and have never, ever needed to switch profiles on the fly (not much of a games player). The problem is that something in the nVidia suite of software has co-opted the Ctrl-Alt-H hotkey to switch it's profiles. Each monitor running 2048x1152 32bit colour ![]() Samsung SyncMaster (23.1"vis, s/n HVMSB02065, November 2009)ĭriver Version 6. ![]() Windows XP Professional Service Pack 3 (build 2600), 4G of Memory, LOTS of free space ![]()
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