Originally posted by: BFG10K
interesting .. it doesn't happen with AMD drivers does it
I doubt it, but you can check by testing it yourself.
-of course i could let the "application decide" since i can't
Unless the application has a hidden forced setting you still have to decide by using its own option.
"Always off" in the driver will force it off in the application regardless of what setting it has (or so it should).
OK, i will do it and report back ...
Always off is the way i *like* it
- screw "tearing" - i barely notice it and i will accept it without whining as long as i get
smoothness and
performance without that damned annoying mouse input lag
--or whatever the hell it is annoys the heck outta me ... and i can adjust it a bit ... but i hate fritzing with it for every game and i don't make profiles - so, after that rant>
:music:"always off is the life for me":music:
i like my cake RAW if i can eat it that way
btw, it will be annoyingly slow .. i am testing with a
single stock 2900pro right now as i am switching cards back and forth and changing drivers like socks ... i might O/C her .. DX10 Crysis, right .. i can use lesser settings, right .. or do i need to stick my XT back in for Xfire?
EDIT it's never easy is it ... sigh, it's gonna take awhile .. i will stick my 2900xt back in and test at "very high"
in the article, Derek writes:
Slower GPUs will benefit less from not forcing VSYNC off in the driver, but even if the framerate is near a CPU limit (say, within 20%) performance will improve. NVIDIA seems more impacted by this than AMD, but we aren?t sure at this point whether that is because NVIDIA?s cards expose more of a CPU limit due to their higher performance.
NVIDIA is aware of the VSYNC problem, as they were able to confirm our findings yesterday.
so .. there IS an
easy button .. i don't even have to test it as Derek did .. it
could be partly a "DX10 - MS" issue