TL;DR: NVIDIA's RTX Video Super Resolution enhances video quality on platforms like YouTube and Netflix using AI and Tensor Core hardware on GeForce RTX cards. It upscales lower-resolution videos, ...
NVIDIA RTX Video Super Resolution (VSR) is a groundbreaking AI-powered upscaling technology that enhances video quality in real time. Leveraging the tensor cores in RTX 30 and 40 series GPUs, VSR ...
Old videos don't have to look blurry anymore ...
Earlier this year, Nvidia created an all-in-one app that merged GeForce Experience and Control Panel. Today, the GPU maker has announced a new beta update introducing new features, such as RTX Video ...
Most PCs these days are running displays with resolutions of at least 1080p, but not all videos have caught up. Many videos on sites like YouTube were shot on low-quality cameras, or uploaded before ...
TL;DR: NVIDIA's RTX Video Super Resolution uses AI and Tensor Cores on GeForce RTX GPUs to upscale 720p videos to 4K in seconds, enhancing streaming quality. Launching on ComfyUI in February, it ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Nvidia is gradually bringing across every GPU setting from its Control Panel to create a single app. Nvidia is ...
DLSS 4.5 brings dynamic multi-frame generation to GeForce RTX 50-series cards and improved Super Resolution upscaling for the rest of us. I've been reviewing hardware and software, devising testing ...
The free VLC media player will soon get Nvidia’s RTX Video HDR feature on top of its existing Super Resolution support. RTX Video HDR uses AI to convert SDR color space videos into HDR ones, ideal for ...
The new Nvidia GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs feature up to three encoders for 4:2:2 video and FP4 for ramped up AI performance, plus new AI tools for livestreaming, DLSS 4 to boost 3D rendering, NVIDIA ...
AI-powered upscaling in NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 30 and 40 series graphics cards. Introduced in 2023, RTX Video Super Resolution (VSR) upscales 2K to 4K content on the fly when rendered in Chrome or Edge ...