

If you are still having problems adjusting the brightness of your screen, you can try using a third-party application such as “Nvidia Inspector” or “ Nvidia Profile Inspector“. In the “Composite” section, uncheck the “Enable Composite” option and click “OK” to save your changes. To do this, go to the “Advanced” tab and click on the “Settings” button.

This setting is known to cause issues with brightness control on some systems. Another thing you can try is to disable the “Composite” setting in the Nvidia Control Panel. If there are no updates available, you can try manually installing the drivers from Nvidia’s website. You can check for updates by going to the “Drivers” tab in the Nvidia Control Panel. First, make sure that you have the latest drivers installed for your graphics card. If you are still having difficulty adjusting the brightness of your screen, there are a few other things you can try. You can also enable or disable the “auto-brightness” feature, which will automatically adjust the brightness of your screen based on the ambient light in your environment. From here, you will be able to adjust the brightness of your display by moving the slider to the left or right. In order to adjust the brightness of your screen, open the Nvidia Control Panel and go to the “Display” tab. Thankfully, there is now a way to control brightness directly from the Nvidia Control Panel.

For years, users have been struggling to find a way to adjust the brightness of their screen without having to go through a third-party application. I meant to link to the DDU page, I updated the link in the above.Nvidia’s Linux drivers have been notoriously difficult to work with when it comes to brightness control. the link i posted explains that it has been replaced by the DDU tool. I highly recommend the tool!ĮDIT: As pointed out make sure you are using the DDU tool, not the Driver sweeper tool. select from the dropdown which drivers you want to wipe (AMD/Nvidia) and run it.Īfter my wipe i removed and reinstalled the Nvidia Drivers just for good measure, but it brought my boot times back to under 15 seconds and completely got rid of all my freezing issues. It will ask you to restart in safe mode, when it comes up you will more than likely see that multiple GPUs are installed. after some trouble shooting i ran the below. then just the other day my games started freezing 5-10 mins in. Everything seemed to work fine, but boot times were taking almost 30 seconds longer than before to get from the windows screen to login. When i upgraded to my 780Ti a few months back, i did the standard complete uninstall of all the AMD drivers, and just installed the Nvidia ones in its place.
