There are some tricks you can use to trigger the Nvidia/Intel autoswitching to force it to run on the NVidia chipset, even if you don't set it up in the NVidia control panel.
On Sat, Dec 15, 2018 at 3:56 AM Andrew Cunningham <andr...@mac.com> wrote: > Hi Chris, > I managed to work around the issue by falling back to a slower rendering > system. Also it turns out the laptop has a switchable graphics subsystem to > nVidia ( which works perfectly) or Intel, so there are two workarounds. > > I'll check out that validator. > > Thanks > > Andrew > > ------------------ > Read this topic online here: > http://forum.openscenegraph.org/viewtopic.php?p=75312#75312 > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > osg-users mailing list > osg-users@lists.openscenegraph.org > http://lists.openscenegraph.org/listinfo.cgi/osg-users-openscenegraph.org > -- Chris 'Xenon' Hanson, omo sanza lettere. xe...@alphapixel.com http://www.alphapixel.com/ Training • Consulting • Contracting 3D • Scene Graphs (Open Scene Graph/OSG) • OpenGL 2 • OpenGL 3 • OpenGL 4 • GLSL • OpenGL ES 1 • OpenGL ES 2 • OpenCL Legal/IP • Forensics • Imaging • UAVs • GIS • GPS • osgEarth • Terrain • Telemetry • Cryptography • LIDAR • Embedded • Mobile • iPhone/iPad/iOS • Android @alphapixel <https://twitter.com/alphapixel> facebook.com/alphapixel (775) 623-PIXL [7495]
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