Best way is just to try it with and without and see what you get. Now, this may not affect you with a 1060 - I recall hearing about this from people that had hotter rigs, so that the CPU was much, MUCH slower than then GPU's, so your mileage may vary. And the overhead of dealing with that may actually cost you time. In practice, that doesn't always turn out to be true - because the GPU is so much faster than the CPU, Daz can get unhappy with the CPU-side rendering speed, and may abandon it. So, you'd think that if you rendered with CPU+GPU, that it'd be somewhat faster than rendering with just the GPU, since the CPU would be helping out some. If one of the rendering options is performing too slowly, it'll end up being cut out. Though I WILL say when i plug my hdmi into the intergrated, it does not switch over, even though multi-monitor is enabled in the bios. So does the bios, so does the nvidia graphics manager, so does the intel graphics manager (for the onboard gpu). ![]() One of them is trying to "balance out" their use by observing how long each is taking to render portions of the image. windows sees both my nvidia and the intergrated. If you have both GPU and CPU enabled, Daz will try to use them in parallel.ĭaz does some interesting stuff when it has multiple rendering options.
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