Download here: http://gg.gg/virwd
*Download Cuda 9.0
*Cuda Mac Install
*Cuda 8.0 Download
*Cuda Download 10.0
In After Effects CC (12.1), we have added a checkbox: “Enable untested, unsupported GPU for CUDA acceleration of ray-traced 3D renderer.” Enabling this checkbox will do a couple of things: After Effects will use the GPU-accelerated ray-traced 3D renderer with any GPU that meets minimum requirements (which include 1GB of VRAM and CUDA 5.0). The CUDA 5 Installers include the CUDA Toolkit, SDK code samples, and developer drivers. Please note driver support for WindowsXP and Windows 32bit for Tesla Workstation products is limited to C2075 and older products only. The CUDA Cards Enabler for Adobe Premiere Pro and Adobe After Effects (Mac Edition) allows Premiere Pro to recognize unofficially supported CUDA video cards, which will enable hardware acceleration in these Apps. Please note that this article applies only to Mac OS X.
Sep 09, 2012 Download Text File: Install Cuda for Mac OSX 1) Download and Install Cuda Drive for Mac: http://www.nvidia.com/obje. Understand the GPU and GPU driver requirements for the November 2019 (version 17.0) and later releases of After Effects. What GPU should be used for the best performance?
New GPU chipsets are always being introduced, and the After Effects team does not qualify or recommend individual GPU chipsets, however, here are some guidelines you can follow to get the best GPU for your workflow.
*Individual GPU technologies are less important than overall GPU performance. After Effects supports OpenGL, OpenCL, CUDA, and Metal to varying degrees. Choose a high-performance card that meets your individual budget and system needs.
*Premiere Pro utilizes the GPU more broadly than After Effects currently does, and its technology is shared with After Effects. The list of recommended GPUs for Premiere Pro (see Adobe Premiere Pro CC system requirements) is a good place to start.
*Other applications in your workflow may have a GPU requirement that is higher than After Effects. Take all of them into consideration.
*Check if you have Multiple GPUs in the same machine.
*Check if you have unsupported GPUs on your Mac machine.
After upgrading to After Effects version 17.0, there may be driver issues, and you may need to upgrade your driver.
Some of the driver issues that you could face are: Remove unicode characters online.
*System incompatibilities that are known to cause instability and crashes that lead to data loss.
*The current version of your network device software may cause issues with your Adobe application
*Intermittent crash while editing.
*You can get error messages such as, ’This version of your operating system is incompatible with your Adobe application.’
*No previews, garbled previews, frame drops, performance issues including slow playback or frame glitches.
This article explains what is needed for using CUDA graphics with the 2019 versions of After Effects (17.0 and higher). NVIDIA CUDA graphics acceleration requirements for MacOS and Windows
Note:
Adobe strongly recommends updating to NVIDIA driver 430.86 or later when using After Effects. Drivers prior to this have a known issue which can lead to a crash.
NVIDIA CUDA graphics acceleration requires CUDA 9.2 drivers.
CUDA is not a requirement for running the Adobe video apps, but if you prefer CUDA graphics acceleration, you must have CUDA 9.2 drivers from NVIDIA installed on your system before upgrading to After Effects versions 17.0 and later.
These drivers are updated regularly so check the NVIDA website to be sure you have the most current version for your GPU.

You can find the latest GPU drivers here: Updating display driver and CUDA 9.2 driver for MacOS
*Requires macOS 10.13.6 (most recent version of High Sierra).
*A current NVIDIA GPU with at least 4 GB of memory.
*NVIDIA display driver version 387.10.10.10.40.105.
Note:

The current version of your NVIDIA drivers for macOS 10.13.6 do not support CUDA 9.2 and cause issues with your Adobe application. Adobe does not recommend upgrading beyond macOS 10.13.6 as Mac0S 10.14 (Mojave) does not currently support CUDA.
Make sure you update the device driver before you install the CUDA driver. You can update the device driver from the following locations:
*Display driver: version 387.10.10.10.40.105 (direct download).
*CUDA driver: You can update the CUDA driver in the CUDA panel in System Preferences or follow this link - 130_macos (direct download).
There is a host of After Effects features that use GPU to accelerate rendering. To view these effects, select Project Settings > Video and Effects Rendering. For a list of GPU-accelerated effects and features, see GPU-accelerated effects.
Some third-party effects, like Element 3D by Video Copilot uses the GPU independently of After Effects. Refer to the documentation from the publisher for guidance on what GPUs and technology are supported. Effects such as Magic Bullet Looks, hook into the Mercury GPU Acceleration pipeline (such effects are also GPU-accelerated in Premiere Pro).
Mercury GPU Acceleration allows After Effects to render supported effects using the GPU, which can significantly improve render time.
You may recognize the Mercury name from Premiere Pro. After Effects uses the same technology that is used by Premiere Pro Mercury Playback Engine for rendering. (The playback engine in After Effects is otherwise different from Premiere Pro, so After Effects only uses the rendering component of that technology.)
Mercury GPU Acceleration is a project setting. To enable it, select File > Project Settings, click the Video Rendering and Effects tab, and set the Use option to Mercury GPU Acceleration. Depending on your computer and GPU, you may see multiple such options. After Effects supports the following GPU technologies:
*OpenCL (macOS and Windows)
*CUDA (Windows only, with a Nvidia GPU)
*Metal (macOS only, 10.12 and later)
Note:
NVIDIA CUDA is not supported in MacOS 10.14 and later. If you are using an Apple-authorized NVIDIA GPU, you can continue to use the Metal Mercury Playback Engine.
A couple of technical points worth noting about the above list:
*All of the VR effects such as VR Blur only work on the GPU. Unlike the other effects, they do not currently have a CPU fallback. We recommend a GPU with high VRAM, 4GB or better, to use these effects. Their advantage for VR over other effects is that they are seamless, and they wrap the ends of the VR image together. Also, some of them are useful on non-VR footage because they are wholly new to After Effects, like VR Chromatic Aberrations.
*Layer transforms and layer quality require layer motion blur to be enabled because by themselves, they do not render significantly faster on the GPU. But rendering motion blur on the GPU requires it to be aware of the transforms and quality, so these calculations are done on the GPU when motion blur requires it. This is an opportunity to point out that in a mixed CPU and GPU rendering environment, there is a performance cost to moving frames between CPU and GPU memory. If an effect is not faster to render on the GPU than on the CPU, you lose performance time while copying the frames back and forth.
*The Hardware Accelerate Composition, Layer, and Footage Panels option in Preferences > Previews is enabled by default, and uses OpenGL to prepare the rendered frames for screen display during previews/playback. Once After Effects renders the frame, it next prepares that frame for display, taking into account the screen resolution, scaling, overlays like guides and layer handles, and color management. Specifically, View > Use Display Color Management, when a working space color profile has been enabled for the project. When the Hardware Accelerate option is disabled, After Effects processes all of that on the CPU, but the GPU can accelerate this process, especially color management. The GPU requirement for this is very low, and any modern video card with a small amount of VRAM is adequate.
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NOTE: With the release of Adobe After Effects CC 2015 you no longer need to use the CUDA.BAT program for After Effect to recognize your video card. Now all you need to do is go into Preferences, then Previews and select GPU Information. Then follow these steps:
Check the box that says ’Enable untested, unsupported GPU for CUDA acceleration of ray-traced 3D render.’
Next, right above it, set Ray-tracing to GPU (unsupported)
That’s it.
When Adobe came out with Adobe After Effects CS6, they offered a new Ray Traced 3D Rendering Engine that would take advantage of the NVidia video card’s GPU and the CUDA cores for offering faster rendering of ray-traced 3D images.
While Adobe still offers the ray-traced 3D render engine in After Effects CC and CC 2014, they now consider this an obsolete feature and are no longer supporting it. Because they are no longer supporting the Ray Traced 3D Render Engine, the newer video cards will not work and they will give you this error if you try to enable them:
After Effects error: Ray-traced 3D: Initial shader compile failed. (5070::0)
You will get this error with the GTX-750, GTX-750 Ti and the GTX-900 series video cards. So with these video cards do not enable the GPU for Ray Traced 3D in After Effects.
After Effects only used the NVidia CUDA cores with the Ray Traced 3D Render Engine. It does use the GPU with OpenGL for a few other minor things. For these things the GTX-750, GTX-750 Ti and the GTX-900 series video cards will work just fine. It is ONLY the Ray Traced 3D Render Engine that can’t be enable.
Adobe has bundled Cinema 4D Lite with the later versions of After Effects and this is what you will need to use instead of the Ray Trace 3D Renderer.
If you are running any other program, such as Adobe Premiere, you can still the the GTX-750, GTX-750 Ti and the GTX-900 series of video cards without any problems.
For a more detail explanation you can read our blog post about the After Effects error: Ray-traced 3D: Initial shader compile failed. (5070::0)
Adobe has only “certified” a few video cards for use with the Ray Traced 3D Render Engine. (See Note 1, About Adobe’s Certified Video Cards). If you don’t have a certified card, there is no problem. You can just edit a file (raytracer_supported_cards.txt) and add your video card to a list of certified video cards. Once you do that, Adobe After Effects will use your NVidia video card’s GPU with the ray-traced 3D rendering engine. (Except, with the GTX-750, GTX-750 Ti and the GTX-900 series video cards.)
In this article I will show you two ways to add your video card to the list. One, is with a small program I wrote. The other way is by manually editing the file.
If you are running other Adobe programs, such as:
Adobe Premiere CS5, CS5.5, CS6, CC and CC 2014
Adobe After Effects CS6, CC and CC 2014 (and you are not using the GTX-750, GTX-750 Ti and the GTX-900 series of video cards)
Adobe Media Encoder CC and CC 2014
Adobe SpreedGrade CC and CC 2014
Adobe Prelude CC 2014
NOTE: If you are using After Effects CC (12.1) or After Effects CC 2014, Adobe has added this checkbox – “Enable untested, unsupported GPU for CUDA acceleration of Ray-Traced 3D Renderer.” Go ahead and simply check the box or follow the steps below to add your video card to the list of approved video cards. Either way, After Effects will allow you to use the Ray-Traced 3D Render Engine will use your video card.
UPDATE: I have heard from a few people, that even though they checked the box for ’Enable untested, unsupported GPU.’ They had some strange problems. However, once they added their video card to the raytracer_supported_cards.txt file list, their problems stopped. So I would recommend adding your video card to the list.
This article covers a lot of information, not just how to add your video card to the raytracer_supported_cards.txt file. The information is important, so PLEASE read the article in it’s entirety.
PLEASE NOTE: Studio 1 Productions does not sell video cards, Adobe products or other products mentioned in this article. We are simply users of Adobe and Sony Vegas products. So we are not trying to sell you anything by providing this article or the unlock software.
We invite you to take a look at the products we do offer, simply place your mouse over the products link at the top of the page or click on the products link at the top of the page.
Please Update to the Latest Version
Please check to make sure you are running the latest updated version. This is very important as Adobe has made several fixes for the Ray Traced 3D Render Engine so it is more compatible with other NVidia video cards. (Except the GTX-750, GTX-750 Ti and the GTX-900 series of video cards)
When ever you Update After Effects
The file called raytracer_supported_cards.txt file contains a list of NVidia video cards that allow After Effects to use the GPU with the ray-traced 3D rendering engine.
When ever there is an update to Adobe After Effects CS6, CC and CC 2014, this file gets over written, so you will need to run the program I wrote or manually edit the list to add your video card.
Video Card Drivers
Important - DO NOT use the video card drivers from the video card manufacturer or from Windows, they are almost never current.
Important - DO NOT use auto-updates for the video card drivers, they don’t always have access to the latest version.
It is very important that you are using the latest drivers from NVIDIA. Please go to www.nvidia.com and download the latest drivers.
Before you install your new NVIDIA video card, you should remove the old video drivers that you were using. On Windows 7, 8 or 10 go into the Control Panel and select Programs and Features. Scroll down the list of programs and remove the video driver that you are currently running.
Then power down the computer and install the new NVIDIA video card. Once that is done, power up the computer and install the driver you downloaded. Then Reboot your computer after you have installed the latest drivers.
DO NOT down load any Beta drivers. They may not be stable. Only download the WHQL drivers.
If you lose the on board sound in your computer, then read the FAQ article on how to fix it. Note: This FAQ article is for Adobe Premiere, but the on board sound fix will be the same.
OpenGL
After Effects CS6, CC and CC 2014 will use OpenGL to provide a faster and more responsive working environment when drawing images on the screen. Thus, giving you real-time draft renderings.
Adobe recommends OpenGL 2.0 or higher and Shader Model 4.0 or higher.
To see if you existing video meets this requirement, simply follow these steps:
1. Start After Effects CS6 or After Effects CC and CC 2014
2. Select EDIT at the top of the screen and a drop down menu will appear.
3. Choose Preferences at the bottom of the menu.
4. Select Preview
5. Then click on GPU Information.
A window will open up showing you information on the GPU. Look under the section for OpenGL and it will show you the following information: (Your information may be different than mine)
Vendor: NVIDIA Corporation
Device: GeForce GTX 570/PCI/SSE2
Version: 3.0.0
Total Memory: 2.46GB
Shader Model: 4.0 or later
There are two lines above I have highlighted in red. The version line shows you the OpenGL version and the Shader Model is the version of the Shader Model you are running.
Version should be 2.0 or higher and Shader Model should be 3.0 or higher. If they are not, update the video card driver, reboot the computer and check again. If they are still not what is recommended, it is time for a new video card.
CUDA Cores
Each NVIDIA GPU has a certain number of CUDA cores, which is the computing engine in the NVIDIA GPU.
Above, under OpenGL, I showed you how to get information on you GPU. Follow those steps again and this time look at the bottom section marked - CUDA.
Look at the driver version, it has to be 4.0 or higher. If is is not, then update your video card driver with newer video card drivers from the NVidia website. Then reboot the computer and check again. If is is not 4.0 or higher, then it’s time for a newer video card.


Video Card Memory
Your video card will need a minimum of 1 Gig of video memory, preferably DDR5 memory.
Video cards come with different types of memory, such as DDR2, DDR3, and DDR5 type of memory.
Video cards with DDR2 memory can be too slow for the Ray Traced 3D Render Engine. If you have a older video card with DDR2 memory, replace it, plain and simple.
If you have a video card with DDR3 memory you will be fine with that, however you will get better performance with a video card with DDR5 memory. So you might consider replacing your video card.
If you are buying a new video card, the newer video cards come with either DDR3 or DDR5 memory:
*The lower end cards generally come with DDR3 memory
*The mid-level cards can come with either DDR3 or DDR5. In this case, go for the DDR5 version
*The higher end cards come with DDR5 memory.
DDR5 memory is faster than DDR3 memory, when all things are equal.
Chart of NVidia Graphic Cards
Here is a chart of the different NVidia Graphics Cards.This chart will open up in a separate window so you won’t loose your place here in the article.
It will show you how many CUDA cores are on each card, the Memory Interface Width, the Memory Bandwidth Speed, the Recommend Size of the Power Supply.
NOTE: The specs and power supply requirements listed in the chart are based on NVidia’s web site. PLEASE check with the manufacturer of the video card you plan on purchasing to see what their power supply requirements are.
Power Supplies
The Power Supply - Before you run out and buy an NVIDIA video card, you need to know how big your power supply is in watts. Different video cards will require that you have a minimum number of watts power supply. So open your computer, if you are comfortable doing that, otherwise, find someone who is.
Look on the label on the power supply for the number of watts it is rated. It may say something like 300 watts, 450 watts or higher. Once you know the watts, then you can select a video card that will work with your power supply.
For example, the NVIDIA GeForce GT730 will work fine with a 300 watt power supply. But, the GeForce GT780 will require a minimum of a 600 watt power supply.
This is why you need to know your computer’s power supply size before you run out and buy a video card. You don’t want to use a video card that your power supply can’t handle. For example, if you decide you really want a GeForce GT780 video card and you only have a 300 watt power supply, then you will need to upgrade your computer’s power supply.
If you don’t want to bother upgrading your power supply, then make sure you stick with a video card that will work with what every th

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