

Intel Core i3-3120ME Processor (3M Cache, 2.40 GHz) Intel Core i3-3120M Processor (3M Cache, 2.50 GHz) Intel Core i3-3115C Processor (4M Cache, 2.50 GHz) Intel Core i3-3110M Processor (3M Cache, 2.40 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor G1820 (2M Cache, 2.70 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor G1630 (2M Cache, 2.80 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor G1620T (2M Cache, 2.40 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor G1620 (2M Cache, 2.70 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor G1610T (2M Cache, 2.30 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor G1610 (2M Cache, 2.60 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor 927UE (1M Cache, 1.50 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor 1047UE (2M Cache, 1.40 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor 1037U (2M Cache, 1.80 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor 1020M (2M Cache, 2.10 GHz)

Intel Celeron Processor 1020E (2M Cache, 2.20 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor 1019Y (2M Cache, 1.00 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor 1017U (2M Cache, 1.60 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor 1007U (2M Cache, 1.50 GHz)

Intel Celeron Processor 1005M (2M Cache, 1.90 GHz) Intel Celeron Processor 1000M (2M Cache, 1.80 GHz) This download is valid for the products listed below: The total available is how much the on board will use in total if your software requests it, and the 64MB (or 32MB in your case) will be what your video card always has reserved so no other process can use it.This document provides information about Intel’s Graphics Driver for 3rd Generation Intel Core Processors with Intel HD graphics and select Pentium/Celeron Processors with Intel HD Graphics. Total Available Graphics Memory: Some Number If you look at your adapter properties you will see: There is no point in dedicating 1.5GB to video if you aren't using it at the time since it could instead be used as a drive cache or your software could use it for whatever it's doing at the time. The video card will use system memory as needed but reserves the 32MB for basic operation. If not its OK i still have my gaming computer, but I wanted to be able to actually do some higher-tier stuff on this laptop. How do I adjust how much RAM is allocated to the GPU, I looked in the BIOS but I couldn't find anything, and I am pretty sure you can do this. 12GB is the Video RAM+ the normal couple megabytes not usable in RAM. Right now it says I have 8GB of Ram and 7.88GB usable so I am assuming that missing. I upgraded the RAM to 8GB so I am comfortable putting a maximum of 1.5GB at it. This currently has 32MB of Graphics Memory, which is a very big problem since I want at LEAST a half a gig to play indie games.Īpparently the Intel 4000 uses shared memory, which uses RAM as VRAM and is only set at 32MB. I own a Lenovo Yoga 13 wielding the Mighty (/s) Intel Graphics 4000 on a Intel i5-3317U with a base clock of 1.7Ghz.
