- #3D SETTINGS FOR WINDOWS 10 UPDATE#
- #3D SETTINGS FOR WINDOWS 10 DRIVER#
- #3D SETTINGS FOR WINDOWS 10 FULL#
This solution also creates a pathway for 3D printer manufacturers to utilize Windows 10 IoT Core and the Network 3D Printer app directly within their devices to add Windows-compatible network and other future features.Īdding Network 3D Printer support for an additional printer models is as simple as creating a profile for the device.
Once you have the Network 3D Printer UWP app is running on your Windows 10 IoT Core device, it will broadcast its presence on the network, and anyone connected can easily add it using Windows 10 Settings, same as you would with any other network device.įrom there, after the 3D printer is added to Windows, you can print 3D objects using any 3D printing app, like Microsoft 3D Builder. In this initial release, they’ve added network (both Wi-Fi and wired) and Windows 3D print platform support for more than a dozen well-known and brand new evolutions of 3D Printers:Īnd they’ve made it as easy as possible to set up your Windows 10 IoT Core powered device for network 3D printing. Raspberry Pi enthusiasts can use this solution starting today to network enable their 3D printers and they invite device manufacturers to evaluate the experience that this enables and the benefits of being able to easily Wi-Fi enable their devices and connect them to Windows. Multiple Windows computers on your network can even share the same 3D printer. Today, they have added a new Windows 10 IoT Core sample app, “Network 3D Printer” that adds support for an even wider range of 3D printers and allows you to access them over your network.
#3D SETTINGS FOR WINDOWS 10 FULL#
Again- I think this affects me more than some people because my resolution is 1440p (2K) 165 Hz.Since Windows 8.1, Microsoft has been providing native support for 3D printers with most popular printers already enabled via USB plug and play (see this full list of supported printers). After enabling this windows setting, going back to chrome and disabling hardware acceleration the full-screen videos now play normally. I also say this because I just tested this as well: Before if I disabled hardware acceleration in advanced settings then tried to play a video in chrome full-screen it would be choppy as well. My best GUESS after enabling this feature is that it tells the base Windows system to use your dedicated GPU for any video processing instead of the CPU? Again, just a guess.
I tried to run Netflix windows store app and the video played normal in full-screen this time.
I thought it would enable 3D graphics, but after enabling it my monitor went black for 10-20 seconds and came back on normal. Today I finally went into the Windows Display settings and say this setting "3D Display Mode" unchecked.
#3D SETTINGS FOR WINDOWS 10 DRIVER#
I did not try to rollback GPU drivers, but this has been persistent through multiple GPU driver updates.
#3D SETTINGS FOR WINDOWS 10 UPDATE#
This did not use to happen, so I am unsure if this started after a Windows update or GPU driver update. My monitor is 1440p, 165Hz, with an nvidia gtx 1070. It didn't matter if it was full screen or adjust the window to a size greater than 1080 size. I didn't spend a lot of time trying to fix this issue, but recently my Windows Store apps video would be EXTREMELY choppy when running in a resolution greater than 1080p. I also have no idea what this setting does, but it fixed one odd thing for me.