but WDDM is driver related, all graphics instructions pass through some additional layer thing so that IF the graphics driver were to crash, it can restart on the fly, and not bring down the entire system (similar to VPU Recovery for ATI in XP)
On Sun, Mar 13, 2011 at 3:18 PM, Rick van Veen <[email protected]>wrote: > some tricks for raising your graphics preformance... > > Start -> Control Panel -> Apprearance & Personalization -> Personalization > -> Choose "Windows Classic Mode" > > Start -> Control Panel -> System & Security -> Security -> Advanced System > Settings -> Advanced -> press "Performance" -> Settings -> Adjust for best > performance > > This turns off WDDM and gives a bit of a boost. Might not be much, but it > does help with running severe games or other software. ;) > > EpiC > > -- > 9xx SOLDIERS SANS FRONTIERS > -- 9xx SOLDIERS SANS FRONTIERS
