The historic NVIDIA Control Panel gives way to the NVIDIA App

The historic NVIDIA Control Panel gives way to the NVIDIA App





NVIDIA has launched new driverswhich have been updated to version 610.47 WHQLwhere the main novelty has been to add new games compatible with your most popular technologies. But among these new driver features, a new version of the NVIDIA application with a clear purpose. The NVIDIA App the transition of options from the old NVIDIA control panelwhich has disappeared after 20 years.

The NVIDIA App now replaces the classic control panel

Now all features supported GeForce They are already in the NVIDIA Appafter a migration process that has lasted several months. With each new version of the application NVIDIA New functions were added that were also available in the control Panel. The version 610.47 completes this transition and NVIDIA has removed the control panel if you have this latest version installed.

The control panel can still be kept for nostalgia

But if you want to keep the control Panel out of nostalgia, NVIDIA has pointed out that it will not disappear from your system until you perform a clean installation of drivers. In addition, it will also continue to be available in the Microsoft app storebut all new features and bug fixes will focus on the NVIDIA appand this will not receive any additional or other changes. All options related to GeForce drivers are now available within the NVIDIA Appyou can find most of them in the section Graphics.

NVIDIA unifies GeForce Experience, RTX and the classic panel

So, NVIDIA has fulfilled its promise to unify the application GeForce Experiencehe classic control panel and the applications for RTX within the same application. NVIDIA wants your app be the main option for players, with Driver updates, DLSS Override options, GPU optimizationetc.

Juan Antonio Soto

I am a Computer Engineer and my specialty is automation and robotics. My passion for hardware began at the age of 14 when I broke down my first computer: a 386 DX 40 with 4MB of RAM and 210MB of hard drive. I continue to give free rein to my passion in the technical articles I write for Geeknetic. I dedicate most of my free time to video games, contemporary and retro, on the more than 20 consoles I have, in addition to the PC.