Yes, mine falls into that category. It is the GTX260 which has sufficient
CUDA cores that provide quite a bit of acceleration; however, I've learned
that since this card has only 860-something MB memory, it can give problems:
if the video has some photos included that are panned and/or zoomed, the
system will crash. I've had two projects where I have had to turn off
Mercury Playback Engine processing in order to get an output. All other
projects work great, it is ONLY when photos are included. This is an Nvidia
problem and they are aware of it.
 
A second caveat is that while it is easy to add the card name to the
cuda_supported_cards.txt file, some Adobe updates may include Adobe's
version of that file with the update in which case your card name is no
longer there and has to be added again.
 
Lee
 
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Mike Boom
Sent: Saturday, August 06, 2011 12:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [AP] CUDA graphics cards
 
.
Has anyone out there tried the hack to enable non-Adobe-approved 
graphics cards? It sounds pretty foolproof, but I'd hate to be the 
fool to prove that wrong.

Mike Boom


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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