Steam telepítése
belépés
|
nyelv
简体中文 (egyszerűsített kínai)
繁體中文 (hagyományos kínai)
日本語 (japán)
한국어 (koreai)
ไทย (thai)
Български (bolgár)
Čeština (cseh)
Dansk (dán)
Deutsch (német)
English (angol)
Español - España (spanyolországi spanyol)
Español - Latinoamérica (latin-amerikai spanyol)
Ελληνικά (görög)
Français (francia)
Italiano (olasz)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonéz)
Nederlands (holland)
Norsk (norvég)
Polski (lengyel)
Português (portugáliai portugál)
Português - Brasil (brazíliai portugál)
Română (román)
Русский (orosz)
Suomi (finn)
Svenska (svéd)
Türkçe (török)
Tiếng Việt (vietnámi)
Українська (ukrán)
Fordítási probléma jelentése
GPU-Z ^
Ps, it sounds like you've got a laptop/AIO onboard gpu/IGP.
http://products.amd.com/en-ca/search/APU/AMD-A-Series-Processors/AMD-A12-Series-APU-for-Laptops/7th-Gen-A12-9700P-APU-with-Radeon%E2%84%A2-R7-Graphics/195
Yup ^.
But, using more RAM does not mean it will compute faster. So, using more RAM as VideoRAM will not make the game run faster.
What you seem to be saying is it doesnt really matter as it just uses my computer's RAM?
If you scroll way down to the game section there's a few games ( not many) that it'll play.
If it's a phsyical GPU card, then the VRAM is set at one single value, as per whats installed on the Card, GPU-Z can fully ID that GPU.
Also are there two Radeon GPUs present or just one?
As some Laptops may have two Radeons, one onboard the APU and also one dedicated Radeon GPU that is seperate. However many System Specs apps might only see the one that is onboard the CPU, by default.
GPU-Z or SPECCY should show ALL your GPUs if there are multiples.
You're wrong by the way.
The integrated videochip has no dedicated RAM of its own. Not enough space in the CPU for that.
It entirely uses shared RAM.
Which i already said back then.