I really hate the look of dlss, but I haven't tried transformer yet.
Sent from my SM-S936U using Tapatalk
I really hate the look of dlss, but I haven't tried transformer yet.
Sent from my SM-S936U using Tapatalk
It's way way better. Less ghosting and better detail all around.
It has a bit of a performance penalty as opposed to the older versions, but (at least speaking in regards to 1440p) running it in performance looks better than the old version did with quality mode so you're easily gaining the performance back and then some.
Can also just use either the Nvidia App or Nvidia Profile Inspector to make games automatically use the new version.
There are a handful of games that don't like having the FG fucked with (Monster Hunter Wilds being one), but that can generally be fixed by manually updating a few files in the game folder so you can get the better frame generation as well.
What's a good pc just for remote work? Only need it to remote into my workplace computer, run zoom calls and just be able to drive dual 1440p displays, preferably as quite as possible and despite what Google's suggestions seem to be throwing at me I feel like a $1200 Surface laptop is probably overkill. Still have my personal pc but have some additional space now and just looking for something for a dedicated office.
Any option in the $300–$500 range should work without any issues. I’d recommend choosing one that feels comfortable to use, especially in terms of the keyboard, unless you plan on using an external keyboard and mouse.
I'd also recommend that range plus a kvm switch so you can use your normal keyboard, mouse, and monitors
Here's what we're purchasing in-house to do just that. GMKTec M7 USFF PC. We've been using GMKtec for a while now since Intel sold their NUC mfg. to ASUS. Have not had any reliability problems with them for the past two years.
Fake frames or not Multi-framegen is amazing.