The Notebook Review forums were hosted by TechTarget, who shut down them down on January 31, 2022. This static read-only archive was pulled by NBR forum users between January 20 and January 31, 2022, in an effort to make sure that the valuable technical information that had been posted on the forums is preserved. For current discussions, many NBR forum users moved over to NotebookTalk.net after the shutdown.
Problems? See this thread at archive.org.

    Photoshop to get GPU and Physics acceleration

    Discussion in 'Windows OS and Software' started by XPS1330, May 24, 2008.

  1. XPS1330

    XPS1330 Notebook Deity

    Reputations:
    81
    Messages:
    967
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    30
  2. David

    David NBR Random Reviewer NBR Reviewer

    Reputations:
    7,515
    Messages:
    8,733
    Likes Received:
    7
    Trophy Points:
    206
    They should have done that a long time ago!
     
  3. Gintoki

    Gintoki Notebook Prophet

    Reputations:
    2,886
    Messages:
    6,566
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    205
    This is quite interesting, thanks for the info.
     
  4. Mr. Wonderful

    Mr. Wonderful Notebook Evangelist

    Reputations:
    10
    Messages:
    449
    Likes Received:
    6
    Trophy Points:
    31
    I know. I heard about this a few weeks ago on CNET, and it has only hit me now to the fact of why the hell weren't they doing this before? That's what a GPU is for. With that in mind, now it really doesn't surprise me that PS runs better on the integrated GPU Mac]books than on Windows machines (the GPU was the deciding factor last year when I was deciding between the two).