Six years after the introduction of the hardware-based G-Sync technology Nvidia has announced it's opening up its graphics cards to adaptive sync monitors which support Variable Refresh Rates.
It’s not quite plug-and-play, though—at least in most cases. The driver will automatically enable variable refresh rates on FreeSync displays that meet Nvidia’s strict “G-Sync Compatible” requirements ...
During CES 2019 this year NVIDIA announced that their graphics cards now support AMD FreeSync monitors thanks to an update to the latest GeForce drivers. If you are wondering how the new technology ...
I just joined the previous decade and got my first variable refresh rate monitor. I have a stupidly simple question that I’m having trouble finding an answer to. In my use case with an NIVIDIA GPU, ...
Earlier this year we put Nvidia's support for FreeSync monitors to the test, grabbed every FreeSync monitor we had in the office, hooked them up to a collection of Nvidia GPUs, and verified that in ...
Hi all, I have a 2017-vintage ASUS PG279Q G-SYNC monitor (QHD resolution: 2560x1440) which on the box said can do up to 166 FPS but the monitor's menu only shows up to 150, but that's not what this ...
It's been two years since Nvidia unveiled G-Sync Pulsar. It combines variable refresh rate with adaptive backlight strobing, synchronizing the panel refresh, GPU output, and strobe ...
Both Intel and AMD have been the most dominating brands in the PC industry, so, it is pretty obvious that there will be having some sort of healthy competition. But a few years back, Nvidia announced ...
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