There are two things to install with NVIDIA cards. One is the Web Driver. That will install the NVIDIA driver manager and will provide the BETA driver for MacBook Pro and iMac, as well as GPU support for NVIDIA cards on MacPro. That link is: The other is CUDA driver. There's a lot of details on this if you care to read/search, but basically it allows GPU to do 'work' that the CPU could do.
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The CUDA driver just needs to be updated for OS X 10.11. Most people do not do this regularly. That driver link is: FYI - Adobe supports GPU acceleration and that is usually through CUDA or OpenGL.
Hopefully, your Mac will be running smoothly and you won't have to perform any repairs. If the First Aid function has found any issues, follow the steps to get it back on track. Step 3: Back up your Mac You'll need some form of external storage to save your files when your update to macOS Mojave.
There is a bug with OpenGL and Adobe right now, so changing to CUDA fixes most of this for video apps. The 'Metal' support is another issue entirely. You can edit this post rather than adding to the thread. Working 1Password (has minor display glitches but functions fine) 4D Ableton Live 9 Adium AVID Mbox2 mini Acrobat Pro X Adobe Creative Cloud CC 2015 (Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Audition, etc.) (not Media Encoder) Adobe Photoshop CS6 and up (Adobe Bridge V5.0.2 (CS6) will no longer recognize my Camera, a Canon 7D. Ok, I've finally figured out how to get TrueCrypt to work with El Capitan (my first update since Mavericks, where I don't recall f it was working or not, but I think it was). It started up for me (7.1a), but when I tred to mount (an encrypted file container), I get the error in the attached image.
I tried installing OXFuse. No luck at first. But then I re-installed it, selecting 'MacFUSE compatibility layer', and it seems to work now. If you do not see that MacFUSE has disappeared in 'System Preferences', then the 'MacFUSE compatibility layer' was not properly enabled.
You can upgrade to OS X El Capitan from on any of the following Mac models. Your Mac also needs at least 2GB of memory and 8.8GB of. Introduced in late 2008 or later introduced in late 2008 or later introduced in mid 2007 or later introduced in early 2009 or later introduced in mid 2007 or later introduced in early 2008 or later Xserve models introduced in early 2009 To find your Mac model, memory, storage space, and macOS version, choose About This Mac from the Apple () menu. If your Mac isn't compatible with OS X El Capitan, the installer will let you know.