Nvidia dropping 32-bit PhysX from the RTX 50-series' CUDA infrastructure is another sign that game preservation can't depend ...
With the months-long blip in manufacturing that delayed the “Blackwell” B100 and B200 generations of GPUs in the rear view ...
Nvidia’s new video cards drop support for 32-bit CUDA applications, including PhysX.
Some graphically intense PC games from 2005 to 2013 have issues showing off their prowess on cards like the RTX 5090.
The good old Nvidia GeForce GTX 1070 is still in the mix, which is a nearly decade-old GPU, based on Nvidia’s Pascal architecture. You’ll also only need a Core i5 or Ryzen 5 CPU from a few ...
Nvidia's statement on the matter clarifies that only a small segment (0.5%) is affected with potential to see a 4-5% ...
The change makes some classic PC games run poorly even on modern hardware due to a lack of GPU-accelerated physics.
A Taobao seller is offering 16-pin GPU adapters with active cooling and temperature and power consumption monitoring.
After Nvidia removed 32-bit CUDA support on RTX 50 Series GPUs, users went back to the old ways of accelerating PhysX using ...