


tried searching on here with no luck as well. It seems to me that once the mother board sees the card, it just automatically defaults to the GPU and there is no option to use the intel graphics.Ĭan anyone help me out here? Google has been no help at all. I've searched all through my bios and online for answers to how to bypass the card to use integrated graphics with no luck. Uninstall the drivers, go to re-install. I had a friend take the card and put it in his computer. I thought this was a perfect storm that may lead to a nice upgrade to the GTX 1080 but something did not add up. during my trouble shooting it crossed my mind that the GPU may have caused the issue so I took the card out and plugged my HDMI into the MOBO, sure enough it booted right into windows with no issues. Two days ago my wife told me that the "Computer stopped working" Sure enough I could not get it to boot into windows without it freezing on the windows boot screen. I've been trouble shooting a display issue I've been having with my GTX 670. Click ‘Apply’ in the bottom right and you’re good to go.I've been slamming my head against the wall for about 9 hours now.

Where it says ‘Select the preferred graphics processor for this program’ click the drop-down and choose ‘High Performance NVIDIA processor’.Navigate to your Algodoo folder (C:\Program Files (x86)\Algodoo) and select Algodoo.exe and press ‘open'(this step will probably depend on your operating system but should be pretty easy to find).Select the “Program Settings” tab in the main window.Select ‘Manage 3D Settings’ in the left pane.Right-click on desktop and click NVIDIA Control Panel.Thankfully, the solution to this is straight-forward: If it starts with INTEL, go to In rare cases, some laptops will try to use the wrong graphics chipset for Algodoo (we’ve only heard of this problem on the “NVidia Optimus” chipset).Look at the name of the graphics card under the “Display adapters” (in the example image below it is “NIVIDIA GeForce 9800 GTX/9800 GTX+”). If this fails, there is one other way to go about it, and that is downloading the drivers directly from the hardware vendor. Click “Search automatically for updated driver software”.Under “Display adapters”, right-click your graphics card and select “Properties”.Enter “devmgmt.msc” (without quotations) and press enter.

