That should not normally happen, no idea why it might be set up that way on your machine but you would need to go in the BIOS and change it. The only possible explanation I can think of for this is that your BIOS is disabling the Intel card when your PC starts.
I researched about that, and official foruns say that is normal that they dont appear in some cases, if there is other card is in use(in this case a Nvidia card).Īfter folloing official steps that tell to unplug the Nvidia card if unable to update the Intel stuff, i did that, unpluged the card, turned on the PC, and intel card was there under devices, i manage to run the updates without problems, after that, re-pluged my Nvidia card and tried again. Originally posted by LionLord:Yes, it only shows up, if i disable/unplug my nvidia. Assuming each test doesn't last more than a few seconds of play time you can keep the game for 14 days and still be able to refund it as there is no way you will reach the 2 hours play time mark.
PS: Steam refunds policy explicitly states: 2 hours of play time or 14 days for a full refund. This is not true at all, on a dxdiag log all computer components should show up, the fact that the Intel integrated card doesn't is worrying and if I were you I would look into that further aside from Foundation not running.ġ) Could you check if the card shows up in the "device manager" under "display adapters"?Ģ) My last question still stands, are you sure you have plugged in your monitor on the NVIDIA card and not on the CPU directly?ģ) Do you have multiple monitors maybe plugged across both sockets? Next Thing Co.Originally posted by LionLord:The integrated card is not recognised because i have a difrent card, an Nvidia one, thats what other websites tell, that is normal to not find the integrated card when other is in use.
I read somewhere that the shipment will cost $20… I will probably tackle this task in 2016 since CHIP will be available early next year to every one. GLSL Hacker should be easily ported to CHIP since most of the hard work has been already done for the Raspberry Pi. CHIP is designed to run at 1280×720 pixels even if Mali-400 GPU is able to output a FullHD image (1920×1080). This GPU supports OpenGL ES 1.1 and 2.0 API. One interesring thing is the Pocket CHIP: a $49 case with a 4.3″ touchscreen, a QWERTY keyboard, 5-hour battery and of course a CHIP board inside. Maybe next versions of the CHIP will use those multi-core processors.Ī customized Debian distribution (Linux) will be preinstalled on the CHIP (on the Raspberry Pi, you have to put an image on a SD card yourself). The R8 is a single-core processor but quad-core (R16) and octo-core (R58) processors are also available at chinese chip maker Allwinner. Here is an overview of the Allwinner R8 SoC (system on chip) processor:
Connectors: 1 x USB, 1 x micro-USB, 1 x 3.5mm jack for audio/video.Graphics processor: Mali-400 GPU (in the Allwinner R8).Main processor: Allwinner R8 1 GHz single-core ARM Cortex A8.
Here are the main hardware features of CHIP: I will send now, the Dxdiag logs, after all my updates, maybe it helps you guys figure it out.
I discovered this cool project few days ago: CHIP the world’s first $9 computer!ĬHIP is like the Raspberry Pi but four times cheaper. 'Fail to load OpenGL 4.3 Graphic Card not supported: GDI Generic OpenGL supported version 1.1.0 OpenGL version4.3 is required Be sure you have the last version of your graphic card driver installed.' Well, i am 100 sure i have everything updated.