I did remember when I logged in another admin account, PS CC 20 could actually run. This is going to be one of the weirdest solutions for running Photoshop on Windows 7 but after almost two days of trying to install, reinstall, uninstall all other Adobe CC software, running the cleanup and trying to figure out how to disable GPU while starting photoshop and how PS CC 20, 19, 18 all crashes with no option to go in to menu to disable GPU, I was about to settle on an old product PS CC 17 (which crashes with GPU error message). Glgpu.extension=1Ĭlgpu.CLName="Intel(R) HD Graphics 4600" Glgpu.GLDriver="nvd3dumx.dll,nvwgf2umx.dll,nvwgf2umx.dll,nvd3dum,nvwgf2um,nvwgf2um" Glgpu.GLRenderer="GeForce GTX 960M/PCIe/SSE2" OpenCL crashed on at 11:30:57 PM (Initializing OpenCL and OpenCL enabled features)ĭisplay Bounds: top=0, left=0, bottom=1440, right=2560 I guess disabling OpenCL isn't much of a problem as it seems to only accelerate a couple of filters that I might rarely use. I tried using basic mode in the graphics settings but that did not help. In Program Settings, I also set Photoshop.exe and sniffer.exe to High Performance Nvidia. Nvidia Control Panel > Manage 3D settings > Global Settings > Preferred graphics processor > High Performance Nvidia. I have followed the troubleshooting guide. (looked again, and the oldest version of the mobile Geforce GTX series listed on the FAQ is the 965M, which is very similar to the 960M that I have. It doesn't seem logical to expect everyone to buy a completely new computer system every year to be able to use the newest version of Photoshop. But The list of supported cards does not include both of the ones I have: The laptop is only 2 years old from 2015. This is a laptop with Windows 8.1, i7-4700HQ, Intel HD 4600 and Nvidia GTX 960M 2GB with automatic switching (I cannot simply disable one of them), 16 GB RAM. Photoshop CC 2018 crashes on startup when OpenCL is checked.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |