On 3/26/21 5:00 PM, Anil Felipe Duggirala wrote:
On Wed, Mar 17, 2021, at 4:33 PM, George N. White III wrote:
"sudo lshw -c video" or "sudo lspci -k | grep -A 4 -i 'VGA'" should show
the driver used with each graphics device.
Running this command is only listed my integrated graphics card:
0
On Wed, Mar 17, 2021, at 4:33 PM, George N. White III wrote:
> You have "hybrid graphics":
> https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Hybrid_graphics. For laptops
> there is usually a video switch that connects the "active" graphics
> device to the display, and can
> switch from discrete to integr
On 3/17/21 2:33 PM, George N. White III wrote:
Some people keep the display on integrated graphics so they can use the
discrete graphics hardware for numerical computations.
Also, the integrated graphics uses a lot less power if you don't need
the 3D performance.
_
On Wed, 17 Mar 2021 at 14:14, Anil Felipe Duggirala <
anilduggir...@fastmail.fm> wrote:
> hello everyone,
> I have just installed Fedora 33 workstation on my laptop.
> I have never had an additional graphics card on a pc and want some
> guidance as to what I am supposed to do.
>
This is a Dell XP
On 17/03/2021 17:14, Anil Felipe Duggirala wrote:
hello everyone,
I have just installed Fedora 33 workstation on my laptop.
I have never had an additional graphics card on a pc and want some guidance as
to what I am supposed to do.
This is a Dell XPS 9550, which has the integrated Intel HD Graph
hello everyone,
I have just installed Fedora 33 workstation on my laptop.
I have never had an additional graphics card on a pc and want some guidance as
to what I am supposed to do.
This is a Dell XPS 9550, which has the integrated Intel HD Graphics 530, and
the discrete NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960M.