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To do that depends on your card and drivers, but Stack Overflow has a great article on how to go about doing it. If you click on them and see two different video cards (Say, Nvidia and Intel or AMD/ATI and Intel), in addition to making sure BOTH driver sets are up to date, you're also almost always going to be better off using the ATI or Nvidia chip. Those top two tabs are more important if you're on a laptop. If that date is older than about 6 months from the time you're reading this, there's a solid chance your drivers are too old. See the highlighted sections? The most important one is the Date field. We don't use it for much, but it is required, and also, in this case, helpful! All versions will find and run it, as long as you have Direct X installed. Run dxdiag.exe (Vista through windows 8.1, simply hit the start button, and type "dxdiag.exe". The way to determine if your drivers are out of date is:ġ. There's a 95% chance your drivers are out of date, or you have a laptop that has two video chips (integrated and discrete), or both. :) Otherwise, you wouldn't be hearing about. So, if you've seen this message, a few things can be assumed about your setup.ġ.
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