Geforce Gtx 750 For Mac Os

  1. Nvidia Geforce Gtx 750
  2. Geforce Gtx 750 Ti Driver
  3. Geforce Gtx 750 Ti Review
  4. Geforce Gtx 750 Specs
  5. Geforce Gtx 750 For Mac Os High Sierra
  6. Geforce Gtx 750 For Mac Os Versions
  7. Geforce Gtx 750 For Mac Os High Sierra

Despite the Mac Pro 1,1 and 2,1 (2006/7) models hitting past the 10-year mark, there is, surprisingly, a great amount of hardware that is still available for use. In contrast to the age of the older (first) Mac Pros, there is still some new hardware that is being released, which can be used on these Mac Pros, primarily due to the software support available.

Geforce Gtx 750 For Mac Os

GeForce GTX 750 Powered by first-generation NVIDIA® Maxwell™ architecture, the 750 delivers twice the performance at half the power consumption of previous generation cards, all at a great value. For serious gamers, this means you get all the horsepower you need to play the hottest titles in beautiful 1080 HD resolution, all at full settings. I have a bit problem. I bought a Mac Pro 1.1 and I installed Mac Os X El Capitan 10.11 and a GTX 750 ti. I read about the compatibility problems as the black boot screen, but, sometimes (not always) I get nervous when I click the I/O button because I don't know if the Web drivers. Nvidia GeForce GTX 950: mac-friendly? I currently have a GT 120 (512mb) and was wondering if the gtx 950 was compatible with OS X (specifically, a 2010 Mac Pro, 10.8 and upward). If so, is anyone using it? Nvidia GPUs receive driver updates soon after each version update of OS X. Only one driver is released by Nvidia and it includes support for all of their modern GPUs. You will not find individually named Nvidia drivers for OS X, they are all titled 'Quadro & Geforce Mac OS X Driver Release xxx.xx.xxxxx'. STEP 1: Review the NVIDIA Software License. Check terms and conditions checkbox to allow driver download. STEP 2: Download the Driver File Download - RetailMac19.5.8f03.dmg STEP 3: Install.

Granted, Apple stopped supporting these Mac Pros at Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, we can still squeeze a bit more life out of them using Piker Alpha’s boot.efi mod, which allows these older Mac Pros to boot Mac OS X 10.11 El Capitan. This, my friends, is where the GTX 980 TI graphics card comes in.

Why Such a Modern GPU in Such an Old Machine?

In much the same way that others have squeezed life out of their older computers, I too, enjoy doing the same, but (perhaps) take a more “enthusiast” approach. There are very few, if any, generations of technology/computers, let alone an Apple computer, that have been afforded the degree of versatility and third-party hardware/software support/functionality that the current era of tech has extended over to the first gen Mac Pros.

The idea behind this was being able to create a very powerful, no-questions-asked workhorse – and it worked out just fine.

To install or even use a GTX 980 TI inside a Mac Pro 2,1, one must have the following already done to their Mac Pro:

  • Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite or later installed (GTX 9xx Maxwell cards will not work in an OS prior to 10.10)
  • Be aware of and accept that there’s no boot screen
  • Be aware that OS X system updates can and will break compatibility

This is not a perfect solution, but it can work perfectly when setup and generally not messed around with.

The particular card I’ve been using is a lovely Asus Strix Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 TI 6 GB model. I picked it up off eBay for $260 back in May of 2017. I picked up 2x 6-to-8 pin PCIe adapters for the card. The card uses 225W under full load, which shouldn’t be a problem for the Mac Pro’s 980W power supply. 75W is being drawn from each PCIe connector, as well as 75W from the PCIe slot. Even under full load, this is still within the designed power capacity of the power rails.

Having operated this GPU inside this Mac Pro for over a year, I can safely say I’ve had no issues.

How about VR on this machine?

It works, but there’s a catch. SteamVR doesn’t pick up on the Oculus rift yet, though I’m certain that if I had the HTC Vive, it’d work just fine. For now, I dual boot Windows 10 off an SSD, play around on the Mac Pro 2,1 via the Oculus app. It took a bit of messing around with the Oculus app to get it working on my Mac Pro as it “needed” SSE 4.2. It was easy to trick the installer/find an old version, and simply update it, and it works.

I mostly play the game Arizona Sunshine on the full resolution, with medium textures and shadows, and always hit the 90fps mark. Realistically, we’re playing a VR game on a mirrored 1200 x 1080 display. It’s really not difficult for this Mac Pro to crunch out such a resolution, on medium settings. The “wow” factor of it being in VR, however, surprised me, that it even worked.

How about Video Editing?

Final Cut Pro X does not take advantage of this card whatsoever, as it’s CPU rendering being done. It’s so useful, but during heavier scenes, it can drop in performance. Adobe Premiere Pro CC does take advantage of this card, but I haven’t really done much in Adobe’s suite, aside form Photoshop.

How about Basic Uses?

Well, let’s put it this way: It’s buttery smooth, no questions asked. 4K video? No problem. Smooth UI scaling and animations? Oh yeah. Mac OS X games? On 1080p, maxed out settings – go for it. It’s all playable. The dual x5365 CPUs don’t hold the card back as much as you’d think, even as it sits on a PCIe v1.1 bus. It benches out at 93-95% of it’s full capable speed.

Nvidia Geforce Gtx 750

Would I Recommend It?

If your idea of a fast machine is to just jam a brand new GPU into a Mac Pro of this age, the answer is no. There are a few other factors in this machine’s speed, such as having completely matched RAM, a 960 GB SSD RAID array comprised of four 240 GB SSD’, and simply keeping the insides clean. While the market value of 1,1 and 2,1 Mac Pros are plummeting (and quite frankly, nonexistent, if at all), the components that are available to this thing are quite generous.

For

If your idea of a fast machine is understanding the limitations/benefits of a machine of this age, and you are willing to invest in this thing, the answer is yes. As old as the Mac Pro 1,1 and /2,1 towers are, they’re very much worth investing in. As of the time of this article, cryptocurrency mining has sharply driven up the prices of the GPU, so chances are, for the price point, I’d suggest a 970/980.

Geforce Gtx 750 Ti Driver

How to Accomplish This?

  • Acquire GTX 980 TI (I advise people do their own research on this, I am not responsible for any bad purchases or bad recommendations! As long as it’s a proper GTX 980 TI, this guide works.)
  • Install Build-Correct Nvidia Web drivers
  • Restart, and set your Nvidia GPU as the primary GPU!

Installing the Asus Strix GTX 980 TI

  • The card fits in about the same as the stock ATI Radeon X1900XT 512 MB card that came with this computer. It needs to be installed at an angle, but it fits.
  • Needs 2x 6-to-8-pin PCIe adapters to work. The Asus Strix 980 TI uses 2x 8-pin Power connectors.

Geforce Gtx 750 Ti Review

Asus Strix GTX 980 TI 6 GB in Mac Pro

Geforce Gtx 750 Specs

How to Install the Nvidia Web Driver Software?

  • Make sure the driver software you install is correct to your build model. Linked here, for example, is for El Capitan build 15G1108. https://images.nvidia.com/mac/pkg/346/WebDriver-346.03.15f04.pkg
  • MacVidCards has a good list of the different Nvidia web drivers that were released in the past. If this link goes down or if links are broken, I might have to host my own files, to make this article more accessible. http://www.macvidcards.com/drivers.html
  • Be careful: Do not update Mac OS X immediately after updates come out, as this can and usually will break compatibility with your GPU drivers and cause your card to be unusable until you revert the Mac OS build (Time Machine or Carbon Copy cloner can fix this), or Nvidia happens to push out an update to the newer OS X build from Apple.
  • There will be no boot screen; you will be greeted by your login screen.
  • Resetting SMC or PRAM will reset the GPU driver from being selected upon startup. The only way to fix this is by switching it back on in System Preferences. This can either be done via VNC if you have another Mac, or if you have the original GPU, can be plugged in, booted up with the original GPU, the driver being selected, then the machine being shut down, and the new GPU being plugged in.

Geforce Gtx 750 For Mac Os High Sierra

If all is well, this is how the card should register in the system, via the various apps which display the card.

The End Result

  • Very stable GPU to use once configured
  • No graphical glitches or artifacts
  • Performs well enough in VR to use on a daily basis
  • Drives games in OS X very well, on high settings
  • Hardware accelerated animations/scaling are buttery smooth
  • Sleek, good-looking GPU inside Mac Pro
  • Extend the life of your Mac Pro 1,1/2,1 by another few years
  • Instead of spending an absurd amount of money on a gaming/VR gaming machine, do this instead!

Geforce Gtx 750 For Mac Os Versions

short link: https://goo.gl/wQW3as

Geforce Gtx 750 For Mac Os High Sierra


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Posted Friday, July 25th, 2014 by rob-ART morgan, mad scientist

Though most of the attention is on the new 2013 Mac Pro. we continue to explore ways to 'pump up' the legacy Mac Pro towers. One of our favorite upgrade paths is the graphics processing unit aka GPU. We recently tested the GeForce GTX 780 with 6G of GDDR5 video memory (courtesy of MacVidCards). It just may be the 'sweet spot.' We'll explain after you peruse the graphs.

GRAPH LEGEND
TITAN Black = GeForce GTX TITAN Black with 6G of VRAM
G780 Ti = GeForce GTX 780 Ti with 3G of VRAM
G780 6G = GeForce GTX 780 with 6G of VRAM
G680 = GeForce GTX 680 Mac Edition with 2G of VRAM
R9_280X = Radeon R9 280X with 3G of VRAM
R7950 = Radeon HD 7950 Mac Edition with 3G of VRAM
R5870 = Radeon HD 5870 with 1G of VRAM
Test 'mule' was a 2010 Mac Pro 3.33GHz Hex-Core.
(RED graph bar means fastest in FPS. The GREEN bar highlights the GeForce GTX 780 6G we are deeming the 'sweet spot.')

DaVinci Resolve 10
We imported a 289 frame 5K RED clip into an HD 1080PsF 25 project with Decode Quality set to 'Half Res. Good.'
We performed a playback with 16 blur nodes being rendered on-the-fly.

Photoshop CC
One of the filters that uses OpenCL is Iris Blur.

LuxMark
This is another OpenCL test. We rendered the complex Room scene using GPU only.

Valley
Using OpenGL, it features advanced visual technologies (dynamic sky, volumetric clouds, sun shafts, DOF, ambient occlusion) while ‘flying’ over extremely detailed, seamless terrain. We selected the Extreme Preset which runs at 1600x900 with Ultra quality and 8x Anti-aliasing.

Tomb Raider
Feral Interactive conveniently includes a built-in benchmark. We ran it with the HIGH Quality preset, Fullscreen, 2560x1440, Vsync off.

Diablo III
Using the best settings with no vsync at 2560x1440, we entered the game at the same location and observed FPS.

Left 4 Dead 2 on Steam
We ran the TIMEDEMO of a recorded game sequence we call 'BF5.' The Advanced Settings were 2560x1440 Rez, Fullscreen, 4x MSAA, Anisotropic 8X, Vsync Disabled, Shader Detail Very High, Effect Detail High, Model/Texture Detail High, Multicore Rendering Enabled.

OctaneRender
A 'GPU only' standalone renderer, it requires a CUDA capable GPU (spelled NVIDIA). Using RenderTarget PT (Path Tracing), we rendered the octane_benchmark.ocs scene.

After Effects CC
The Ray-traced 3D function renders with GPUs exclusively -- if they are CUDA capable. We used an animation simply known as robot' provided courtesy of Juan Salvo and Danny Princz. Danny has posted a compilation of render times.

To repeat, the RED graph bar means fastest. The GREEN bar highlights the GeForce GTX 780 6G we are deeming the 'sweet spot.'

SWEET? Yes, with one exception.

The GTX 780 with 6GB GDDR5 video memory is only slightly slower than the GTX 780 Ti and TITAN Black but costs much less.

The other factor in naming it the 'sweet spot' has to do with power. The GTX 780 6GB runs fine on the dual PCIe internal power cables -- as does the GTX 680 and Radeon HD 7950. The same can't be said of the GTX TITAN or GTX 780 Ti or Radeon R9 280X -- all of which require an auxiliary power feed to avoid a nasty power down of your tower at the worst moment when too much wattage is demanded of the Mac Pro's factory power supply.

Did I mention that the GTX 780 with 6GB of GDDR5 matches the 6GB of GDDR5 in the TITAN?

The one fallacy to my 'sweet spot' award has to do with OpenCL. In case you hadn't noticed, the AMD Radeon GPUs smoked the NVIDIA GeForce GPUs running Photoshop's OpenCL accelerated Iris Blur filter and rendering LuxMark's OpenCL accelerated Room scene.

Comments? Suggestions? Feel free to email me, Follow me on Twitter @barefeats

  • The OS X compatible GeForce GTX Titan 6GB and GeForce GTX 780 Ti 3GB can be purchased from MacVidCards. They also offer a flashing and mod service for your existing TITAN or 780. MacVidCards recommends a supplemental power supply. We were able to run it in our 2010 Mac Pro 6-core without the aid of an auxiliary PS.
  • The OS X compatible GeForce GTX 780 6GB can be purchased from MacVidCards. The OS X compatible GeForce GTX 780 3G is available from MacVidCards. They offer a flashing and mod service your existing 780 for $200.
  • The OS X compatible GeForce GTX 770 4G is available from MacVidCards.
  • For GPUs not linked here, visit the MacVidCards main eBay store page.
  • The EVGA GeForce GTX 680 Mac Edition can be ordered from EVGA direct or from Other World Computing(MacSales.com), Trans International (TransIntl.com), and Amazon.
  • The GeForce GTX 680 4G is available from MacVidCards.
  • The OS X Compatible Radeon R9 280X 3GB is available from MacVidCards.
  • A flashed Radeon HD 7970 3GB running at PCIe 2.0 is available from MacVidCards.
  • The Sapphire Radeon HD 7950 Mac Edition is available from OWC , TransIntl, and Amazon

WHERE TO BUY AN UP-CLOCKED 12-CORE MAC PRO TOWER

  • Visit EditBuilder.com's eBay Store. Or you can email them or call them (1-855-EDIT-BAY). They are offering both tray replacements as well as complete setups with 1-3 year warranties. They also offer up 128GB 1333MHZ RAM and graphics card upgrades for Mac Pro towers.
  • Also, check out Other World Computing's Processor Tray Upgrade Program.
  • Live in the UK? Visit ScrumpyMacs for 'fire breathing' Mac Pro options.

WHERE TO BUY A MAC PRO or other APPLE products:
USA readers can help us earn a commission by using this Apple Store USA link or by clicking on any Apple display ad. Live outside the USA? No problem. We are affiliated with these Apple Stores:

WHERE TO BUY MEMORY and CPU UPGRADES FOR THE 2013 MAC PRO

  • EditBuilder loaned us their 2013 Mac Pro 10-Core test unit. Check with them about CPU and memory upgrades for the 2013 Mac Pro. You can email them or call them (1-855-EDIT-BAY).
  • Other World Computing has memory upgrades for the 2013 Mac Pro.
  • Trans International has memory upgrades for the 2013 Mac Pro.

WHERE TO BUY FACTORY REFURBISHED MACS
Apple Store USA has refurbished Macs with 12 month warranty that can be extended to 36 months with AppleCare. Pay attention to the GPU it comes with.

Other World Computing has a Used Mac Store.

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copyright 2014 Rob Art Morgan
'BARE facts on Macintosh speed FEATS'
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