#Nvidia Controlpanel
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In order to understand your problem/issue further, we would like you to provide additional specs of your PC/Laptop. Please provide the following specs:
- Laptop Model (If you are using a laptop)
- CPU Model
- Motherboard Model
- RAM Model & Speed (Please tell us if you have enabled XMP or using custom timings)
- GPU Model
- SSD/HDD Model & Capacity (Specify where is Windows installed to)
- PSU Model & Capacity (Not applicable for laptop)
- Windows Version (Please also state the Windows version as well, such as 23H2 or 24H2, etc.)
- Monitor model, resolution, refresh rate and cable used (HDMI or DisplayPort)
- Apps & games you are trying to run (Please also specify where you get your games from like Steam/Battle.net/Xbox Game pass)
In addition to the following specs, we would like you to answer the following questions:
- Have you reinstalled the Nvidia Drivers by removing them with DDU and reinstalling them by downloading the drivers manually and installing them?
- Have you made any changes to your PC/Laptop in the past few days (such as software/hardware install)?
- Have you encountered any error codes/bluescreens/graphical glitches when encountering the problem? Describe steps to reproduce the problem. Please send a photo/screenshot/video of the problem here as well.
i5 14600k, MSI Z690 Unify, Corsair Vengeance 64gb ddr5 6400mts XMP, RTX 4070ti Super, 2x 1TB Crutial CT1000P3SSD8 NVMe, 1x 1TB Crutial CT1000P3PSSD8, 2x 1TB HDD Microsoft Storage 2HDDs combined to one (windows installed on first Nvme),
Be Quiet Pure power 12M 1000w,
Windows 11 24H2,
Monitor is an Samsung Odyssey Oled G8 4k Resolution (Displayport in use)
-DSR Factor‘s not showing up in Control Panel
<@&185648538955415552>
@sick hazel
You are using DSC. DSR is disabled if DSC is engaged
If you are experiencing display issues, graphical artifacts, dithering or black screens especially on high resolution and high refresh rate monitors like the Samsung G9, it may have been caused by DSC (Display Stream Compression) being enabled. Display Stream Compression was developed to reduce the amount of data that is required to be transmitted between the video source, like what a graphics card is, to a monitor or TV. The goal is to compress the video stream without degrading the quality and therefore allowing higher resolutions and refresh rates. The need for DSC arises as the connections between the source and the monitor or TV are limited by the capability of the ports and cables alike. If the GPU detects that a display supports DSC, DSC mode will be enabled automatically if the display exceeds the bandwidth of the ports (HDMI or Displayport). Please check the model of your monitors, the GPU and the ports on your GPU & monitor with the respective manufacturers (LG, Samsung, Nvidia, AMD, Intel) to determine the maximum supported resolution with & without DSC. For more details on bandwidth & resolutions can be found here: Guide to Display Cables / Adapters (v2) - Displays - Linus Tech Tips
For Nvidia GPUs:
Using a monitor/display with DSC support over DisplayPort 1.4+:
- Display Stream Compression over DisplayPort 1.4+ is supported on Turing class (GeForce RTX 20-series/GeForce GTX 16-series) and higher GPUs.
Using a monitor/display with DSC support over HDMI 2.1:
-Display Stream Compression over HDMI 2.1 is supported on Ampere class (GeForce RTX 30-series) GPUs.
- While you may use a an older GPU (eg. GeForce GTX 10-series) with a display that supports Display Stream Compression over DisplayPort 1.4+/HDMI 2.1, you may not be able to select the highest resolution or refresh rate supported by the display.
- When a display is connected to the GPU and is set to DSC mode, the GPU may use two internal heads to drive the display when the pixel rate needed to drive the display mode exceeds the GPU’s single head limit. This may affect your display topology when using multiple monitors. For example if two displays with support for DSC are connected to a single GeForce GPU, all 4 internal heads will be utilized and you will not be able to use a third monitor with the GPU at the same time.
- On a related note, NVIDIA DSR, NVIDIA DLDSR and NVIDIA Image Scaling are not supported when high bandwidth mode (not necessarily DSC) is engaged. This threshold is dependent on the GPU generation, with Blackwell (50 series) having the highest threshold before requiring it.
- If the GPU detects that a display supports DSC, DSC mode will be enabled automatically. Some displays may allow you to disable DSC by changing the communication link from the displays internal settings (eg. changing the DisplayPort mode from Displayport 1.4 to DisplayPort 1.2)
To determine if your PC monitor, notebook display or TV supports Display Stream Compression, please refer to your display manufacturer.
A monitor that uses DisplayPort 1.4 or HDMI 2.1 with DSC may cause reduced amounts of available video connections.
A GeForce GPU internally provides up to four display heads. For most monitors, each monitor connection uses one display head.
Very high end displays that use DisplayPort 1.4 or HDMI 2.1 with DSC utilize enough bandwidth that they use two display heads for one monitor. This will reduce the maximum available displays used with a single GPU.
On DisplayPort 1.4a with HBR3, if a monitor's capabilities exceed the rough equivalent of 4K120 (3840x2160 at 120Hz), including other resolution equivalents (e.g. 1080p400 (1920x1080 at 400Hz) or 1440p250 (2560x1440 at 250Hz)), the display might utilize DSC. (Some capability is lost due to timing requirements.)
To use the maximum amount of displays with such monitors with a single GPU, use the monitor's OSD to disable DSC, or use an alternative, lower-end connector if available.
Alternatively, if your CPU has an iGPU, you can enable it (if it's not enabled by default), and plug any extra monitors to the motherboard's display output(s) instead.
As a third option, if your computer does not have an iGPU or motherboard display outputs, and has extra physical PCIe x16 slots (does not need to be electrically x16) with at least two slots' worth of clearance, you can add another video card to immediately add extra video outputs. If using an NVIDIA card, make sure that the driver you're using supports both video cards; mixing driver versions is not allowed, so very old cards may be unusable.
Your only option here is to upgrade to the 50 series
but why
READ THE BLUE TEXT
Cause Nvidia basically trying to save pennies by putting an older monitor output rather than the newest one on Radeon or Intel GPUs
You need to pay up to enable DSR, or use a lower resolution and Hz monitor
Please avoid using any form of AI search such as ChatGPT, Gemini, Grok, Perplexity, DeepSeek, Copilot, they are known for inaccurate answers. These articles will provide you more information on why:
https://www.cjr.org/tow_center/we-compared-eight-ai-search-engines-theyre-all-bad-at-citing-news.php|
https://www.techspot.com/article/2973-ai-hallucinations/
Of note:
- Chatbots were generally bad at declining to answer questions they couldn’t answer accurately, offering incorrect or speculative answers instead.
- Premium chatbots provided more confidently incorrect answers than their free counterparts.
- Multiple chatbots seemed to bypass Robot Exclusion Protocol preferences.
- Generative search tools fabricated links and cited syndicated and copied versions of articles.
- Content licensing deals with news sources provided no guarantee of accurate citation in chatbot responses.
Use Google or Bing instead, and ignore any AI Overview/Copilot answers. Use only results that are neither AI nor sponsored for what you're looking for.
HDCP has nothing to do with it
its says i can disable High bandwith mode with it
You mean an inaccurate and fake chatbot?
Ignore it. That chatbot unfortunately is making up nonsense