- Jan 28, 2005
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We have three Ryzen computers around here. I should probably sell one of them since it's just not used that much anymore. I built them all, but none for gaming.
I found an old GT-720 card I pulled from a workstation. Forgot I had that one. I put it into a rig with 2600X. This card can only handle 30Hz. Playing 4K video and hardware acceleration on in Chrome, it maxes GPU at around 60%. And it adds about 20% more work for the CPU. The 4K Night Walk in Tokyo Shibuya video is pretty smooth, better than the NVS-510 card, but I do have adapters on the 510 card that may not be up to 4K workload
Turning off acceleration in Chrome, it really does not add much work to the 2600X CPU, with an overall workload of 25%, and a flash max on one core of 45%.
4K video is smoother when the card handles it rather than CPU
I was thinking that if hardware acceleration is turned off, and the CPU has plenty of reserves, then 4K video should be butter smooth, but it's not in my experience here
I found an old GT-720 card I pulled from a workstation. Forgot I had that one. I put it into a rig with 2600X. This card can only handle 30Hz. Playing 4K video and hardware acceleration on in Chrome, it maxes GPU at around 60%. And it adds about 20% more work for the CPU. The 4K Night Walk in Tokyo Shibuya video is pretty smooth, better than the NVS-510 card, but I do have adapters on the 510 card that may not be up to 4K workload
Turning off acceleration in Chrome, it really does not add much work to the 2600X CPU, with an overall workload of 25%, and a flash max on one core of 45%.
4K video is smoother when the card handles it rather than CPU
I was thinking that if hardware acceleration is turned off, and the CPU has plenty of reserves, then 4K video should be butter smooth, but it's not in my experience here