![]() I quickly wrote up all the details of how to actually change this setting, and I’m so glad it’s now worked out for so many. Read the full story, and the step-by-step fix instructions, at my site here: /display-driver-nvlddmkm-stopped-respondingįor maimonguy, his quest is still unfolding, in the comments section, right there alongside 38 other mostly-positive outcome stories I fixed it by using “Prefer Max performance” instead of “Adaptive” in NVIDIA Control Panel ![]() First, I learned a bunch about the problem, so that when I finally found this single-sentence clue by Yowan, it seemed more reasonable than random: This is one of those never-would-have-guessed-it fixes, where plain old stubborn determination prevailed. For me, and for many other site visitors, apparently. I even helped myself with this same software adjustment later on, when I had a similar problem on a Windows 8 laptop. The whole saga turned out to be a bit complex, but in the end, the fix was simple. Moving graphics cards around and upgrading drivers didn’t fix the issue. ![]() Last summer, I bumped into a Windows 7 video driver problem that was particularly difficult to cure. Ah, the dreaded “Display driver stopped responding and has recovered” message, aka, TDR error.
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