If you have a strong computing system then this page will probably not apply to you very much
There are many different settings built into your system that can lower or slow the performance of your computer
for this sector I will specfiically be talking about windows model systems as with them, I serve the most experience.
If you have a computer with strong and updated hardware then this page probably won't serve much use for you.
For my first tip, it's testing performance with hardware accelleration. Hardware accelleration is a system process that offloads
processes from the CPU and forwards them to the GPU. This is usually used to maximise performance but with older
hardware systems this can commonly overload the graphics drivers causing lower performance, stutters, black screens and framerate drops.
From my experience, my old system used a GTX 1650 card. This struggled very hard when trying to use hardware accelleration and after I
turned it off I gained large performance boosts and less stuttering problems. But recently I have upgraded to a stronger system
utilizing a newer generation card, the RX 9060 XT. This is a very significant upgrade from my old card and it seems to perform much better with hardware acclleration turned on.
In my opinion, if you have older generation cards then turn this feature off.
For my final tip, it is to always check background processes. When using your computer, in the bottom right side there is
a (^) symbol. This is the system tray, that commonly shows the most consuming background processes in use. Usually these are very small
and insignificant to performance. But always closing down the unneeded proccesses can serve some boost to your performance. Having too
many open at once can commonly overload the central-processing unit, leading to significant performance losses.