Dec 02, 2018 I’m trying to upgrade my 2010 8-core Mac Pro (5,1) with the Asus GTX1060 6GB OC on my system running macOS 10.13.6 (high-sierra). While still using my base card (ATI HD 5870), I installed the web driver and CUDA driver from NVIDIA and restarted. I updated to Sierra with out any problems. Installed the updated the web drivers from NVIDIA but see that I still don't have CUDA drivers that work. Yes, that GPU would be helpful. Currently there aren't any Pre-Fermi GPUs running the CUDA42 App. The current OS would be fine as CUDA doesn't work in Yosemite and above running Pre-Fermi GPUs. The highest OSX that can run CUDA on a Pre-Fermi GPU is Mavericks (Darwin 13.x). For those Pre-Fermi cards in Mavericks, and other cards in Mountain Lion & Lion, you should install this driver; The App hasn't been tested in Snow Leopard, but, it should work in Snow Leopard using this driver; If you compare the times of my Pre-Fermi Cards running CUDA42 with similar cards running the Mac OpenCL App, the CUDA42 App should be quite a bit faster on the Older cards. Unfortunately, Beta has already deleted the tasks run back in August on my older cards, so, there aren't any completed tasks to show. It seems you also don't have the CUDA Driver installed. This is what it should show with driver 5.5.47 installed; NVIDIA GeForce 320M (256MB) driver: 3290.07 OpenCL: 1.0 Without the CUDA driver you will not be sent any CUDA tasks. Also, the block on OpenCL Apps is only for Macs with El Capitan & Sierra, therefore, your Mac will be sent OpenCL Apps which could take some time to finish on that machine. Next you will probably be sent the other OpenCL App, it could be days before you are sent the CUDA App.once you get the driver installed. After the driver is installed it will also show up in the Event Log on Startup. Did you get any warnings when you tried to install the CUDA Driver? Once the driver is installed you will see a CUDA preference in System Preferences, do you see one of those? In my Lion system, which is where the CUDA42 App was compiled, I have CUDA-Z installed, it gives you CUDA Info and will tell you if CUDA is working. You have to use an older version with Lion, I'm using version CUDA-Z 0.7.184. Wacom driver for osx sierra. The complete list is here, If you get CUDA working, I'd suggest Aborting ALL those OpenCL Tasks. Else it might be some while before you are sent a CUDA task. I had to Abort around 130 OpenCL tasks on my Mac before it sent a CUDA task. Mac osx 10.14 mojave does not work with adobe photoshop cs4. Instgram download in osx says app only available for ios devices. Since the Block was appiled last month you don't have that problem in El Capitan & Sierra. It seems you also don't have the CUDA Driver installed. This is what it should show with driver 5.5.47 installed; NVIDIA GeForce 320M (256MB) driver: 3290.07 OpenCL: 1.0 Without the CUDA driver you will not be sent any CUDA tasks. CUDA driver have been installed, I've downloaded the file from and I had no error on install. Also, the block on OpenCL Apps is only for Macs with El Capitan & Sierra, therefore, your Mac will be sent OpenCL Apps which could take some time to finish on that machine. Next you will probably be sent the other OpenCL App, it could be days before you are sent the CUDA App.once you get the driver installed. After the driver is installed it will also show up in the Event Log on Startup. Did you get any warnings when you tried to install the CUDA Driver? Once the driver is installed you will see a CUDA preference in System Preferences, do you see one of those? In my Lion system, which is where the CUDA42 App was compiled, I have CUDA-Z installed, it gives you CUDA Info and will tell you if CUDA is working. You have to use an older version with Lion, I'm using version CUDA-Z 0.7.184. The complete list is here, If you get CUDA working, I'd suggest Aborting ALL those OpenCL Tasks. Else it might be some while before you are sent a CUDA task. I had to Abort around 130 OpenCL tasks on my Mac before it sent a CUDA task. Since the Block was appiled last month you don't have that problem in El Capitan & Sierra. Computer is at work so I will check CUDA on monday. I have the beta running on a MacBook Pro. I will get it on the other machines when I get a chance. Just a little reminder about how nVidia Drivers are released. Usually, after Apple releases a new OS to the Public nVidia will release a New driver for that OS if needed. It usually takes a couple days after the Apple Public release before nVidia releases the Drivers that support that new OS. It's been that way for quite a while now, and nVidia users know to wait a few days for the new nVidia driver before updating the Apple OS.
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