Gloggan wrote:I am playing wow, and up to three days ago everything worked perfectly with isboxer. But after wednesday the issue with the grapichs started.
The same could be said about an automobile. Three days ago your tires were fine but today you've got a flat tire. Anything can
happen at any time. If a piece of hardware was "about to go" or "nearing its end," multiboxing on a system can easily push
something to it's max when playing a single game will not. The issues you're describing are usually caused by the video card itself
(obviously), a power supply that cannot supply the video card with enough power, or even bad RAM (least likely of the three). If you
had bad RAM you'd most likely be seeing blue screens or system restarts instead of the driver recovering.
Gloggan wrote:I have updated drivers and I am far away from exceeding the video ram.
The GTX 275 comes equipped with 896MB of video RAM. I'll assume you're monitoring that because you sound very sure that you're not
anywhere near that even though I know multiple WoW game clients can easily exceed (double or triple) 896MB of video RAM depending
on their settings (regardless of whether you're using DX9 or DX11).
Gloggan wrote:I can log into the character with full settings with the wow loader without any problem. It only excits when I load my character or characters from innerspace
Right, because multiple game clients can easily stress a system much more than any single game client.
Right now, if you don't have other hardware to troubleshoot with, I would suggest downgrading your driver to maybe 266, 270, or 275
(or maybe even reinstalling your current drivers with the guide below). I don't know how you're installing/uninstalling drivers but,
when installing nVidia drivers you cannot simply overwrite the old driver as that can cause issues with old drivers conflicting (this is
hidden in the nVidia documentation). Also, don't use Windows Update to update drivers since the same issues may occur.
I hate to recommend this driver installation guide because the author has done a terrible job formatting it but, it's the only reference
I can point people to at the moment --
http://www.evga.com/forums/tm.aspx?m=1174372The link is to eVGA but the guide is universal for all nVidia cards. Also, when installing drivers they usually come with an HD audio
driver of some sort (I don't know if the GTX 275 will even have that option). If you're not using the HD audio (this is
not your sound
card driver), 3D Vision, or any of that other bloat that's in the installation package... then don't install it. I believe the guide I linked
covers that.