Do you have the intel GPU and QSV enabled and allocated RAM for it in your BIOS? There is no separate switch in Vegas pro. You should get the render templates for QSV and CPU only, when QSV is active on your system.
If combining the on board Intel® HD Graphics with a external PCI/PCIe video card, Windows will allow using the two graphics controllers at the same time, but the only dual display mode available is "Extended desktop". If you are looking for other dual display options like "Clone display" then it will be necessary to connect the two monitors into one of the graphics solutions, the on board or the video card so Windows will give you the dual display modes available depending on the graphics adapter."
In order to accomplish this, the most important thing is to change some settings on the BIOS. Please go to the configuration tab>video>integrated graphics device> set to “always enable”
You should also have a monitor connected to the intel graphic at power on to get the initiation started. I have my main UHD monitor connected to the DP output of the mainboard.
You should also have a monitor connected to the intel graphic at power on to get the initiation started. I have my main UHD monitor connected to the DP output of the mainboard.
I am not sure on that. I remember from the past I had issues with rendering speed on magix pro x which uses qsv for a long time. I always had gpu disabled in mobo bios since as a gamer I always had a very powerful videocard. But when I enabled it, the rendering speed of magix pro x NLE was en par with my other nle's. I vaguely recalled I briefly attach a monitor to the mainboard to initate this, but now I run without monitor to the mainboard for over a year. QSV seem to work now without actually having to physically connect a monitor to te intel graphic interface.
QSV seem to work now without actually having to physically connect a monitor to te intel graphic interface.
This may be on newer BIOS mainboards. At least in the past this was a requirement and if QSV is not working it is an option to test ;)
yes that could be, I flashed my bios a few months ago as well to support a cpu upgrade on my older mobo to 4790k (I know, crazy to still to upgrade an older cpu family, but I was not prepared to spend time an effort to build and install yet another PC, my wife would kill me!)