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Looking through what little source of their drivers is released you'll find their defaults. Because including it in nvidia-settings is apparently too obvious(?).. Which brings me to the point of this, I expected settings for games and some software, but was quite surprised to see entries for window managers, gnome-shell, etc. Quite bizzare is the rules they are applying _disable_ GSYNC [1].
Is there something I'm missing here? I have hardware that does GSYNC yet their own profile settings force it off. From what I gather of older threads this was to address perceived interactivity especially with the mouse... That's great but it also affects things I use every day. Webbrowser, terminal, etc
Simple test shows 60Hz for example
The HUD on my monitors confirm a higher refresh (165Hz) which is kinda pointless if applications aren't utilizing it.
There used to be a weird quirk/hack in mate where you could enable a benchmark mode within either mate or xfce. It threw up an fps counter of its own but more importantly ran the WM uncapped. For the life of me I can't find it any more though.
[1] - NVIDIA-Linux-x86_64-396.24/nvidia-application-profiles-396.24-rc
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To my knowledge it absolutely isn't designed for normal non-gaming use at all.
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if you have high refresh monitor like i do (144hz one), you don't actually need anything against tearing, its barely noticable anyway at that high refresh rate. Check your DE/WM compositor, it might be just forcing it to 60hz. I have MATE desktop and my desktop is nicely 144hz, i can confirm that with moving my mouse to my other monitor which is 60hz, the difference is night and day :)
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Problem is although I'm pushing 165hz, some applications aren't coming anywhere near that. Doesn't appear related to frame render time either which is rather annoying.
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Testing now with kwin. No, not full KDE. Difference is quite remarkable. Though it appears Chormium and Google Capatch do not play well (weird image corruption).