The order of selections in the NVIDIA control panel affects the feel of the mouse!
Posted: 01 Sep 2024, 01:14
I need someone to discuss and test this discovery with me, I need someone more professional to explain how it works.
Call Slender, you are one of the most professional people in this forum.
This discovery came from my friend who told me that when selecting options in "Manage 3D Settings" in NVIDIA Control Panel, it is better to select from the bottom to the top, because selecting from the top to the bottom will cause slight mouse lag.
Like you, when I first heard about this discovery, I also thought he was crazy. It sounded like a complete placebo, but I decided to test it anyway. When I restored the default settings in the upper right corner of "Manage 3D Settings" and applied them, and then selected my favorite settings from the bottom to the top, I found that the mouse behavior changed. It became smoother. Well, I don't understand why the order of selections would cause this change.
So I did more tests. Please note: For all tests, the settings in "Manage 3D Settings" are exactly the same, and the order of all settings is to select and apply your favorite settings from the bottom to the top.
To make the article shorter, (click Restore Defaults in the upper right corner of Manage 3D Settings - Apply - then go to Preview Adjust Image Settings, drag the slider to Performance - click Apply - then go to Manage 3D Settings" and select the settings you like from bottom to top - click Apply.) I simply describe the above behavior as: Default-Apply-TS-Apply-3D Settings Increase-Apply
Default-Apply-TS-3D Settings Increase-Apply (Compared with the above settings, the mouse has become slippery)
Default-Apply-TS-Apply-3D Settings Adjust to Grayscale Correction and Stop-Apply-Continue to Adjust the Remaining Settings-Apply (The feel is very bad)
Default-Apply-TS-Apply-3D Settings Adjust to Power Management Mode and Stop-Apply-Continue to Adjust the Remaining Settings-Apply (A little better than the above, but still very bad)
Default-Apply-TS-3D Settings Adjust to Grayscale Correction and Stop-Apply-Continue to Adjust the Remaining Settings-Apply (There is a pause when drawing the gun, and the feel is not bad)
Default-Apply-TS-3D Settings Adjust to Power Management Mode and Stop-Apply-Continue to Adjust the Remaining Settings-Apply (Smoother than the above, but the flicking effect is better)
There are many combinations, so I won't list them one by one. The strange thing is that whether to apply after previewing the image performance will affect the mouse feel. This is so weird, I spent two days testing this. I'm sure the selections apply in different places affect the mouse feel, even though the settings in Manage 3D Settings are exactly the same.
My guess is that when you change an option, the following options are moved, and then you change back to the previous setting, you can't go back to the original state, so you have to restore the default, but I compared it through nvidiaProfileInspector.exe and didn't find any difference, and I didn't find any difference in the registry. Why is this?
Call Slender, you are one of the most professional people in this forum.
This discovery came from my friend who told me that when selecting options in "Manage 3D Settings" in NVIDIA Control Panel, it is better to select from the bottom to the top, because selecting from the top to the bottom will cause slight mouse lag.
Like you, when I first heard about this discovery, I also thought he was crazy. It sounded like a complete placebo, but I decided to test it anyway. When I restored the default settings in the upper right corner of "Manage 3D Settings" and applied them, and then selected my favorite settings from the bottom to the top, I found that the mouse behavior changed. It became smoother. Well, I don't understand why the order of selections would cause this change.
So I did more tests. Please note: For all tests, the settings in "Manage 3D Settings" are exactly the same, and the order of all settings is to select and apply your favorite settings from the bottom to the top.
To make the article shorter, (click Restore Defaults in the upper right corner of Manage 3D Settings - Apply - then go to Preview Adjust Image Settings, drag the slider to Performance - click Apply - then go to Manage 3D Settings" and select the settings you like from bottom to top - click Apply.) I simply describe the above behavior as: Default-Apply-TS-Apply-3D Settings Increase-Apply
Default-Apply-TS-3D Settings Increase-Apply (Compared with the above settings, the mouse has become slippery)
Default-Apply-TS-Apply-3D Settings Adjust to Grayscale Correction and Stop-Apply-Continue to Adjust the Remaining Settings-Apply (The feel is very bad)
Default-Apply-TS-Apply-3D Settings Adjust to Power Management Mode and Stop-Apply-Continue to Adjust the Remaining Settings-Apply (A little better than the above, but still very bad)
Default-Apply-TS-3D Settings Adjust to Grayscale Correction and Stop-Apply-Continue to Adjust the Remaining Settings-Apply (There is a pause when drawing the gun, and the feel is not bad)
Default-Apply-TS-3D Settings Adjust to Power Management Mode and Stop-Apply-Continue to Adjust the Remaining Settings-Apply (Smoother than the above, but the flicking effect is better)
There are many combinations, so I won't list them one by one. The strange thing is that whether to apply after previewing the image performance will affect the mouse feel. This is so weird, I spent two days testing this. I'm sure the selections apply in different places affect the mouse feel, even though the settings in Manage 3D Settings are exactly the same.
My guess is that when you change an option, the following options are moved, and then you change back to the previous setting, you can't go back to the original state, so you have to restore the default, but I compared it through nvidiaProfileInspector.exe and didn't find any difference, and I didn't find any difference in the registry. Why is this?