I’m currently running 2 displays at 1920×1080 on an extremely old Core 2 Quad processor. If you have a higher end CPU, you should be able to get some pretty high resolutions. So while you are getting some great 3D accelerated graphics, depending on your CPU and screen resolution, you may be noticing some choppiness. While 3D acceleration is working, I have to note that the h.264 encoding for the Blast Extreme session is still being handled by the CPU. Horizon 3D Acceleration Enabled via dxdiag In my setup I’m running a GeForce 550 GTX TI, and a GeForce 640. And no, you don’t need a fancy enterprise GPU. One thing that is really cool, is the fact that 3D acceleration is enabled and working if the computer has a GPU installed (along with drivers). Update – March 14th 2020 – I’ve been using this on 3 different systems since I wrote this article and love this feature! 3D Acceleration I’ll update this post later on once I hear back about how some of my customers have deployed it. I’ve had numerous discussions with customers of mine who also say they see tremendous value in this after I brought it to their attention. Not only have I moved my desktop in to my server room and started remoting in using Blast, but I can think of many use cases for this (machines shops, sharing software licenses, remote access, etc.).
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