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Nvidia’s GeForce Now Windows app can transform your cheap laptop into a gaming PC, II INVIDIA's Bringing More Colour Filters To Your Games ,II Hang onto your graphics cards, as cryptocurrency mining spikes GPUs prices

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The past week saw a repeat of something that has been an ongoing problem for PC gamers looking to pick up a new graphics card: cryptocurrency profitability is way up, leading to shortages of popular graphics cards once more. We've talked about cryptocurrency mining quite a bit during the past year, and this latest surge in mining profitability is a bit hard to nail down. There are always new coins coming onto the crypto scene, but at least looking at WhatToMine doesn't indicate any major changes. Ethereum prices have breached $1,000 for the first time, however, and that might have been enough to drive further speculation on other cryptocurrencies.
Whatever the root cause, the impact on graphics card prices is clear: everything is going up. Again. Here's a quick rundown of the various popular GPUs, with MSRPs, November pricing (not including Black Friday / Cyber Monday discounts), and current pricing information. I've also included an estimate of mining profitability for the past 30 days, though the specific numbers are prone to debate depending on your source. For the "launch price," I've used the most recent official pricing from AMD/Nvidia, which means the GTX 1080 has dropped to $499 for the non-Founders Edition model.
One look at the above data will tell you two things. First, prices on every GPU I checked have gone up quite a bit—and in many cases, it can be difficult or impossible to find cards in stock. The GTX 1080 Ti is sold out at many places, though you can still buy up to two Founders Edition cards direct from Nvidia. (I've left out Nvidia's direct pricing, so that the charts track standard retailer pricing.) Even Nvidia is running out of supply for other cards, however, with the 1080 and 1070 Ti out of stock.
On the AMD side of things, prices are even further out of whack, and the 570/580 and Vega cards are all priced prohibitively high. Unofficially, the RX 570/580 haven't hit the launch pricing since last April, and RX Vega cards have never come close to AMD's suggested pricing.
The second thing you'll notice is that mining profitability is quite high for the past month (and it's even higher right now on a daily basis). That's no indication of future mining returns, but even at the inflated prices most of the cards would hit the break-even point in under three months, and the worst bargains would still pay off in only four months. That paints a pretty bleak picture right now for graphics cards availability, at least if you're mostly interested in buying one for gaming purposes.
If you want to mine with GPUs, things are better right now, but as I've mentioned in the past I'd be cautious with how you set up any mining rigs and try to keep temperatures below 75C. And remember how volatile cryptocurrency can be: there's no telling when those mining dollars per month could fall off a cliff.
If gamers wanted to tweak the visuals and colours of a game beyond what was offered through in-game settings, they would often have to resort to third-party tools and injectors. And while the impact could be substantial, the tools could occasionally be tricky to use, and it didn't always work with every game. But now that kind of functionality is being implemented at the driver level, with NVIDIA announcing the release of NVIDIA Freestyle.
Freestyle is basically a new feature within the GeForce Experience (GFE) middleware that lets you toggle a range of post-processing filters, allowing adjustments to details, contrast, depth of field, tone, and other settings.
There's also a night mode that reduces the level of blue colour - similar to the f.lux freeware tool, or the night mode setting most people have on their phone these days - and colourblind modes.
A shot of NVIDIA Freestyle in action Nvidia’s GeForce
It's not as extensive or as powerful as the combined powers of ReShade and SweetFX third-party tools, but it's also infinitely easier to setup since it's built into the drivers you'll already be using.
A beta version of Freestyle will be available through GFE later this week (release 3.12, to be precise), and you can try it out by toggling the "experimental features" tab within GFE's settings page. Around 100 games will be supported initially, ranging from classics like The Witcher 3Titanfall 2CupheadCSGO, the Dark Souls games, DishonoredWatch Dogs 1 and 2HellbladeGTA 5Euro Truck Simulator 2 and more. You can see the full list of supported games here.

Nvidia’s GeForce Now Windows app can transform your cheap laptop into a gaming PC, II INVIDIA's Bringing More Colour Filters To Your Games ,II Hang onto your graphics cards, as cryptocurrency mining spikes GPUs prices

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