- Jan 7, 2004
- 9,031
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So I got the second half of my SLI twins yesterday, and I was all excited to try out SLI AA. So, I pop open the control panel, and I can't find the SLI AA option anywhere... hmmm... Hit google, find some Mad Mod Mike thing on NV's site that shows you how to enable SLI AA and overclocking by adding the Coolbits registry key with a lot of fanfare about how "you can do it all with NVIDIA". Well, that's all fine and good - I can use regedit, I guess... If I have to...
Flip back a few months... Earlier this yeah I had a CrossFire setup for a while, and as much I don't like the .net requirement for the CCC, ATI has some good functionality in the CCC. For instance, if you want to overclock, you just click a box and agree to the terms. Your Overdrive clocks are remembered when you update your Cats. Want more AA? No problem with the CCC, you just get more options on your AA slider when you enable CrossFire. Easy Peasy... So, why does NVIDIA require us to edit the registry to get the same?
My hope with this thread is that other SLI users will chime in with their agreement that they'd also like to see a more user friendly ForceWare driver that doesn't require you to edit the registry to enable the "advanced" functions, and that the remaining closet AEG members (I'm sure you still exist) might report this back to NVIDIA. What I don't want is for NV to come out with some goofy driver with a whole bunch of bloat and overhead (like the CCC). They can leave the control panel as it is, just give me an "advanced" radio button that enables the coolbits functions so I can enable SLI AA and overclocking without editing the registry AND have my settings migrated to new drivers.
Another thing I don't want is an AEG flamewar thread, that isn't the point.
Flip back a few months... Earlier this yeah I had a CrossFire setup for a while, and as much I don't like the .net requirement for the CCC, ATI has some good functionality in the CCC. For instance, if you want to overclock, you just click a box and agree to the terms. Your Overdrive clocks are remembered when you update your Cats. Want more AA? No problem with the CCC, you just get more options on your AA slider when you enable CrossFire. Easy Peasy... So, why does NVIDIA require us to edit the registry to get the same?
My hope with this thread is that other SLI users will chime in with their agreement that they'd also like to see a more user friendly ForceWare driver that doesn't require you to edit the registry to enable the "advanced" functions, and that the remaining closet AEG members (I'm sure you still exist) might report this back to NVIDIA. What I don't want is for NV to come out with some goofy driver with a whole bunch of bloat and overhead (like the CCC). They can leave the control panel as it is, just give me an "advanced" radio button that enables the coolbits functions so I can enable SLI AA and overclocking without editing the registry AND have my settings migrated to new drivers.
Another thing I don't want is an AEG flamewar thread, that isn't the point.