You are right. There are lots of posts on the Internet about onboard GPU taking effect instead of dediGPU. There is a fix for it but not suffering the problem I never really looked into it.
EDIT - there is always a fix for something like this my friend. You should be able to do something in the bios to turn onboard GPU off. Or get rid of the Optimus software (AMD equivalent I dont know).
I have tried countless fixes so far, none of them worked.
There is nothing in the BIOS of my current system that enables or disables the internal GPU, and also nothing about "fixed" mode as I used to have on my old laptop, where the system would fully run on the dedicated.
I even tried running without CCC and the switchable software, the only result was that the dedicated GPU would be active at all times, but mir would still be rendered on the integrated (MSI afterburner showed load on the integrated GPU)
My original reply still stands, and I don't like the implication that I was trolling - my post was nothing less than informative, and helpful. Just because it wasn't the answer you were after, doesn't mean its trolling.
Just google search your problem - the first result is from Tom's Hardware (
http://www.tomshardware.co.uk/answers/id-1988136/laptop-dedicated-gpu.html)
Pay special attention to this one
And Also this
Also, off of the top of my head, Power Savings mode can be an issue. If you have it on Power Savings mode, it will use onboard instead of dedicated to save power.
The main issue seems to be one of drivers though. Read the thread I posted, its not a long one. And try everything mentioned on there.
/Mark
My implications about trolling weren't aimed at you even though you were in the quote. Take no offence from them.
You can be sure google knows me by now, the searches I have done are countless and all the keywords under the sun were used. I have found loads of threads that speak about similar issues to mine but those that concern the dedi GPU not rendering so and so application or game are all due to 1. badly installed drivers 2. badly configured switchables 3. none compliant software. Sadly, mir chronicles seems to fall in the 3rd category, and I assure you my system is perfectly configured. I do this for a living mind.
I also appreciate your effort, but my laptop uses an AMD HD8750M, not an nvidia. As for power savings, Balanced and High Performance have been tested, probably well before the other 100 "fixes" I have tried.
I would put the blame on drivers, but I have succesfully rendered dx7 games on the external card, no problems. Mir chronicles just doesn't give a ****, and seems forced to run on the card the o/s is using as primary.
Thanks for your input. The more the merrier. If whoever coded the client could also comment, it would be really helpful.