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  2. Nvidia ShadowPlay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nvidia_ShadowPlay

    Nvidia ShadowPlay is a hardware-accelerated screen recording utility available as part of Nvidia's GeForce Experience and Nvidia App softwares for GeForce GPUs. Launched in 2013, it can be configured to record a continuous buffer, allowing the user to save the video retroactively.

  3. Hardware overlay - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardware_overlay

    Secondary displays require both hardware and driver support; some graphics cards may support overlay on the second display while their drivers may not yet support it (note: recent (July 2008) graphics chipset driver bugs can cause most video formats apart from mpeg2 to work on both monitors, and mpeg2 only on the primary with most players).

  4. AMD Software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AMD_Software

    Driver updates and support stopped at AMD Catalyst 14.4 for video cards with support up to DirectX 11 on Hardware, and 10.2 for DirectX 9.0c cards. [citation needed] Windows Vista: 7.2: 13.12: Driver updates and support stopped at AMD Catalyst 13.12 for video cards with support up to DirectX 11. [citation needed] Windows 7: 9.3: 18.9.3 22.6.1 [42]

  5. Nvidia Optimus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nvidia_Optimus

    Nvidia Optimus is a computer GPU switching technology created by Nvidia which, depending on the resource load generated by client software applications, will seamlessly switch between two graphics adapters within a computer system in order to provide either maximum performance or minimum power draw from the system's graphics rendering hardware.

  6. Windows Display Driver Model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Display_Driver_Model

    If a WDDM driver hangs or encounters a fault, the graphics stack will restart the driver. [2] [9] A graphics hardware fault will be intercepted and if necessary the driver will be reset. Drivers under Windows XP were free to deal with hardware faults as they saw fit either by reporting it to the user or by attempting to recover silently.

  7. GPU virtualization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPU_virtualization

    For certain GPU models, Nvidia and AMD video card drivers attempt to detect the GPU is being accessed by a virtual machine and disable some or all GPU features. [35] NVIDIA has recently changed virtualization rules for consumer GPUs by disabling the check in GeForce Game Ready driver 465.xx and later. [36]

  8. DirectX Video Acceleration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DirectX_Video_Acceleration

    DirectX Video Acceleration (DXVA) is a Microsoft API specification for the Microsoft Windows and Xbox 360 platforms that allows video decoding to be hardware-accelerated.The pipeline allows certain CPU-intensive operations such as iDCT, motion compensation and deinterlacing to be offloaded to the GPU.

  9. Video Acceleration API - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_Acceleration_API

    Video decoding and post-processing processes that can be offloaded and accelerated if both the device drivers and GPU hardware supports them: Motion compensation; Inverse discrete cosine transform; In-loop deblocking filter; Intra-frame prediction; variable-length decoding, more commonly known as slice-level acceleration