Any reason at all for me to enable the iGPU in the BIOS?
Got a GTX 780 and an i7 3770K with the HD 4000.
No. If anything I remember that causing instability with some systems in the past.
I have a question about this
Assume I disable the iGPU. If suddenly my dedicated GPU dies, can I actually boot in the BIOS and will it make any output to my monitor to reenable it again or am I screwed?
>>58972131
I assume so long as the GPU isn't connected in the PCI-E slot, it'll revert to the iGPU.
>>58972131
think about it a little, of course you will be fine silly goose
>>58972095
>>58972131
>>58972164
>iGPU
Stop.
>>58972172
I like onboard graphics better
lets get "on board" with calling it that
Ahoy!
>>58972131
Or just reset the bios
Just leave it alone. It doesn't do any harm. Only things you should be looking about it is how much RAM you have assigned to it (mine has like 128 MB) and not being autistic to plug your monitor to onboard video port instead of the actual GPU.
>>58972242
I would just disable it, leaving it on can cause random memory allocation errors
If you use a passthrough setup for virtualizing windows with a GPU, having the igpu available for linux could come in handy.
>>58972916
But the 3770K doesn't have VT-D.
Can you do it without it?
>>58972095
Saves energy for the sake of inestability.
>>58972172
Stop showing your autism