Make sure you have hardware acceleration enabled in the OS if you're using windows. There should be an option inside your BIOS on which GPU to use and you can toggle the Intel Onboard GPU on/off. However if you do want to disable your integrated GPU, you should do that from within the BIOS settings when you boot. There should be no need to disable your integrated GPU. It will use your CPU instead and just run off your integrated Intel GPU. Some effects within Premiere, are CPU only, and won't take advantage of your 1060, so there's no way to get around that. You'll need to add it to the list like I said above and just save the file.Īlso, keep in mind that Premiere will only use the Mercury Playback Engine and utilize your CUDA cores if what you are trying to do, either encoding wise, or effects wise, is supported by CUDA. If you don't see GTX 1060 you will want to add it, without NVIDIA in the name, just GTX 1060.ĭepending on what version of PPro you are using, the 1060 may have been released after that version, so it wont be on that TXT file list. C:\Adobe\Premiere Pro\Common for example. You need to make sure that your graphics card model is listed within the file "cuda_supported_cards.txt" which can be found in the "Common" folder of where you've installed Premier Pro.
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