Something that seems to have been overlooked here is that while producing with any GPU - desktop, tablet or laptop - is
usually faster than using the CPU on its own, oftentimes the resulting quality is noticeably lower.
There were projects I had a few years back that used some flashy transitions, and I wasn't ever happy with the result until I turned off HW acceleration and produced with the CPU. Yes, I was very frustrated that it took longer to produce, but ultimately the video looked exactly how I wanted it to, and so I had to accept that speed vs. quality trade-off.
My point here is that
nothing about the presence, absence or capabilities of a built-in or added GPU will
prevent PD from working on any machine (as long as the system meets the minimum specs), so it's not accurate to look at PD as only working on desktops.
I realize that's
not the same thing as having PD utilize every GPU for maximum speed, and I think that's a perfectly legitimate and ongoing gripe about the product.
In the big picture, though, there are
always tradeoffs between desktops and laptops, and PD's (in)ability to take full advantage of some GPU hardware falls on that spectrum. It's not either/or.
YouTube/optodata
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