ติดตั้ง Steam
เข้าสู่ระบบ
|
ภาษา
简体中文 (จีนตัวย่อ)
繁體中文 (จีนตัวเต็ม)
日本語 (ญี่ปุ่น)
한국어 (เกาหลี)
български (บัลแกเรีย)
Čeština (เช็ก)
Dansk (เดนมาร์ก)
Deutsch (เยอรมัน)
English (อังกฤษ)
Español - España (สเปน)
Español - Latinoamérica (สเปน - ลาตินอเมริกา)
Ελληνικά (กรีก)
Français (ฝรั่งเศส)
Italiano (อิตาลี)
Bahasa Indonesia (อินโดนีเซีย)
Magyar (ฮังการี)
Nederlands (ดัตช์)
Norsk (นอร์เวย์)
Polski (โปแลนด์)
Português (โปรตุเกส - โปรตุเกส)
Português - Brasil (โปรตุเกส - บราซิล)
Română (โรมาเนีย)
Русский (รัสเซีย)
Suomi (ฟินแลนด์)
Svenska (สวีเดน)
Türkçe (ตุรกี)
Tiếng Việt (เวียดนาม)
Українська (ยูเครน)
รายงานปัญหาเกี่ยวกับการแปลภาษา
https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/geforce/products/10series/geforce-gtx-1050/
But, the GPU can steal a bit from your actual RAM sticks.
If you play a game that maxes out or nearly maxed out your GPUs VRAM your PCs Physical RAM can be used to help lessen the impact
So
If you have 8GB Physical RAM up to 4GB can be used as shared memory, if you have 16GB RAM up to 8GB can be used as shared, so Half of whatever RAM you have can be used for shared memory if ever needed. So by the looks of it you have 8GB RAM, thats where the 6GB available graphics memory comes from, Half of your RAM and then the 2GB the GPU itself has.
This process is automatic and cannot be changed
More RAM will not affect your GPU, only the available shared memory it can access. More or Faster RAM will not do increase overall graphical performance in games..
Now, VRAM is typically even faster than RAM, and it's typically more VRAM than RAM in a gaming PC. Just like you, I have 8GB RAM and 2GB VRAM, GTX 1050 as well. Once again, if we exceed the VRAM limit - we'll likely have crashes, missing textures, glitches. Once again, to prevent that, PC uses another storage, which is RAM in a modern PC. Every graphics card is allowed to use up to half of RAM to store the data needed for GPU, and just like with RAM and HDD/SSD it can lead to decreased performance and stutters, but, on the other hand, thanks to that feature we can say install some high-res textures on an old game like Skyrim and make some nice screenshots. The performance will suffer, but it will work, and that's what matters here.
Most likely you also have iGPU in your processor. I do, I've got i5-2500. So far iGPUs don't have VRAM at all, so they use RAM as VRAM from the very beginning, and that's how people manage to build PCs with say R5 2400G with no graphics card in a small console-like case, that will run games better than modern consoles, because modern consoles suck in terms of performance.
Its not crazy powerful so you wont be able to max out the majority of games.
beat you to it
And Shared Memory is not the same as Virtual Memory(Pagefile)
How is it not? Using another storage for data when main's full seems the very same process to me.
Oh, I see where's the confusion here. I wasn't talking about shared memory at all, I was talking about virtual memory in general. It is indeed true that pagefile is not shared and and RAM used by graphics card is, but in both cases it's virtual memory. It's just that Windows says "shared" exactly, but it's still a virtual memory nonetheless.
1050 Ti is 4gb
Ignore what Windows says for total vram that is above what the gpu actually has onboard.
Speccy is also wrong with showing the correct vram.
To check a gpu accurately, use GPUZ