![]() ![]() ![]() I don't know about anyobe else, but I subscribe to a plan on Adobe Creative Cloud and this tends to be updated automatically and I am pretty sure there are no checks made on a user's system before the updates are downloaded and installed, so there is little opportunity to be informed what amy (or may not) work after an update has been installed. It seems there are issues with a wide range of different NVIDIA Graphic Processors and I think Adobe need to look into it and treat them all as an issue. If a Quadro P1000 is not recognized in Photoshop, it's a bug and should be reported as such. And that's why this should be posted in the feedback forum. But for that to happen, the engineers need to know about the problem. That is a bug and a Photoshop issue, and we all expect it to be fixed in an upcoming update. Cards like GTX 1050/1060/1650/1660 - all scoring between 30 - are not recognized in Photoshop. The current issue is that a lot of cards that clearly should work, don't. And it does not mean that the Quadro P1000, scoring 1981, will not work.Īnd in any case that's not the current issue with video cards in Photoshop. It does not mean that the Radeon R7 370, scoring 1998, will not work, while the Radeon R9 M395, scoring 2006, will work. It means you need a card with decent performance. It's another way of saying that if you have a card from 2010 that you bought for $100, don't expect it to work. That's just a random limit to indicate the range of cards you should be looking at. " Consider using GPUs with an Average Ops/Sec of 2000 or higher" does not mean that all cards that score above 2000 will work, and all cards scoring below 2000 won't work. This is a matter of reading the meaning, not the words.
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