![]() Adobe now requires a newer version of CUDA than what the GTX 960M supports at hardware level in order to run properly. Finally, at some point in the near future Nvidia will discontinue new driver releases for these older GPUs.Īs it stands, don't be surprised that you have some stability and/or quality issues if you run any newer version of Premiere Pro with that GTX 960M.In the near future, CUDA will be disabled at driver level for all legacy GPUs up to and including the GTX 960M. Beginning with the 440-series Nvidia graphics drivers, CUDA support for GPUs up to and including the first-gen Maxwell (GM1xx) parts have been depreciated: In the case of the GTX 960M, CUDA support is restricted to only CUDA 10.1 level even if the CUDA software itself is CUDA 11.x.The GTX 960m is not a true 900-series GeForce GPU at all - but it is actually a first-gen Maxwell part (GM107) which debuted in the GTX 750 series GPUs back in 2014 - more than seven years ago (whereas the desktop GTX 960 was based on the second-gen Maxwell GM206 part).There are absolutely no Studio Drivers available at all for that GPU and any other 900-series and earlier GeForce GPUs.With that said, as I have told another poster about the GTX 960M, it is effectively no longer supported in any currently available version of Premiere Pro. Note: For NVIDIA graphics we recommend using GPUs that support NVIDIA Studio Drivers. Check with your GPU or system manufacturer directly for the latest drivers and support information. ![]() Responding to a thread with information that is not relevant to the original topic whose last response was a long time ago (a practice called "thread necroing"). Applicable for Premiere Pro and Premiere Rush on desktop The performance will vary based on individual configuration and components. I am sorry to tell you this, but you have practiced poor forum etiquette. ![]()
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