Using GL and GLBasic does not have the Chrome browser tab problem. This thread shows an example Workstation Player 12: Chrome does not render tabs on Windows 10 guest With the DX11 and D3D options, you might see (maybe "not see" is more appropriate) another problem in the form of the latest Chrome browser tabs not being rendered properly. So this might be less sluggish if the video playback works for this option even though 3D acceleration is not available. But looking at the Nvidia GPU Activity icon in the Notification Area, it appears to use the GeForce card on my host machine. It appears to ignore the 3D acceleration settings. With mks.enableGLBasicRenderer, there won't be 3D acceleration at all. The host graphics card will be used so this is not software rendering. With the D3D option, the Windows 10 VM will only have up to DX9_3 capabilities. With 3D acceleration disabled, the three settings of enabledDX11Renderer, enableGLRenderer, and enableD3DRenderer basically gets ignored. (2) add the line mks.enableGLBasicRenderer = "TRUE" to the vmx, with the other 3 mks.enable?Renderer set to "FALSE" (1) 3D enabled, add the line mks.enableD3DRenderer = "TRUE" to the vmx, with the other mks.enable?Renderer set to "FALSE" It is expected that with 3D disabled, the more complex video/graphics on the VM will be somewhat sluggish/jagged/pixelated as the host machine graphic card capabilities isn't used and rendering is through software thus the suggestion to use the OpenGL option instead of DX11 to try to keep the 3D acceleration enabled and it will use the Quadro K600. I would not have suggested to try the enableGLRenderer setting if the host machine only had Intel integrated graphics (that brings out another set of display problems). using DX11 without any vmx edit) or changed to OpenGL. But I suspect the problem partly has to do with the Windows 7 host as I can play back MP4 videos within a Windows 10 VM with 3D acceleration on a Windows 10 host with the default configuration (i.e. The default behaviour in Workstation 12.x with 3D acceleration enabled in the VM, the hypervisor software will use the DX11 capabilities of the graphic card in the Windows host (in your case the Quadro K600) to deliver DX10/OpenG元.3 capabilities in the Windows 10 guest VM. How come my automatic updater in Workstation tells me that all files are up to date? Is it these newer versions are incompatible with my current 10.5.7 Workstation (I am on a 30 day trial if that matters)? 10.1.7 and 10.1.10 out at the VMware website. It appears that either the video "processing" is too slow or the information getting to the video playback is being throttled to a slow rate, hence the "jumping" and "pixelation" distortions.īTW, I have VMtools version 10.1.6 Build 5214329 installed. BTW, I also had MP4 and AVI files on the disk and get the same behavior, so it is not an artifact of a CD/DvD drive reading issue. Also, with the 3D Acceleration turned OFF, other apps are definitely slower, though not that bad. I do not know what is happening, but it appears that deselecting the 3D Acceleration helped, just not enough. However, definitely a step in the right direction! Audio was smooth and consistent, but the video was intermittent and would pixelate going from one scene into another by jumping time and scenes within the video. I was able to get a video and audio on a CD movie (MP4). Left those vmx changes in and deselected the 3D Acceleration. Then made those text changes in the Windows 10 vmx file.no change. I updated the NVIDIA Quadro K600 card to today's (9-9-17) driver (latest and greatest).
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