What's up with those graphics cards lately?
What's up with those graphics cards lately?
I got this from latency monitor: The conclusion says your system is having trouble doing real-time audio and other things. You probably will hear buffer underruns showing up as dropouts, clicks, or pops. One or more DPC routines that belong to a driver running in your computer are taking too long to finish. At least one of these problems seems to be related to the network. If you use a WLAN adapter, try turning it off to see if things get better. Maybe a problem is with power management; disable CPU throttling settings in Control Panel and BIOS setup. Check for BIOS updates. The highest time any DPC routine took was 2544.881653 microseconds (nvlddmkm.sys - NVIDIA Windows Kernel Mode Driver, Version 528.24 , NVIDIA Corporation). GPU: RTX 3060 mobile CPU: Ryzen 7 5800H RAM: 16GB Storage: 512GB SSD
sometimes my computer gets slow when I use it a lot, and there are some problems with its speed.
If you have a laptop, the very first step is checking how hot the CPU and GPU get when your computer slows down. You also need to see if the hard drive (SSD) is too full.
It's quite packed now, so you should stay away from filling the drive beyond eighty-five percent to avoid slow speeds. It might be better to free up some room and check if that makes a difference.
I keep running into problems. I believe it's the graphics card causing it. The longest time a specific program took to run was about 2564 microseconds when using the NVIDIA driver (nvlddmkm.sys). I don't know exactly what that means, but this file is definitely an Nvidia driver.
So how do we feel about those high temperatures? High heat is a big reason why gaming laptops get slow or act up. If you figure it's all in the software, I'd just wipe and restart things with Windows. That usually fixes things way faster than hunting for a specific problem on your own.
It's about fifty-two degrees right now, but even after I wiped everything fresh, nothing is bettering things up for me.