> > It is still easy: > emerge bumblebee > rc-update add bumblebee default > > That's all I did and it works. > > I dont consider bumblebee as a support from nvidia!
With Linux, I just add "optirun " in front of the command in the > program-menu > item. > On MS Windows, I need to: > 1) Start the program > 2) Stop the program > 3) Configure the driver to use the NVidia chipset for the program (It > doesn't > show in the list before I start it once) > > It seems that I was wrong about the way optimus is working in Windows. I never have tried to manually select a GPU for program. I thought that the switching is automatic in Windows, because my games were smooth in Windows! > If there is a powerful Intel GPU. But those don't come close to the specs > NVidia and ATI put into the real GPUs. > > Your right but I am not gonna need those specs for a laptop. Powerful cards are meant for a PC, where the power consumption and cooling are not that important