Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Nvidia DLSS now has one of AMD Super Resolution’s best features

Add as a preferred source on Google

When AMD announced Fidelity Super Resolution (FSR), it had a big advantage over Nvidia’s competing Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS) technology: Open-source code. Although DLSS still isn’t open-source, Nvidia has taken a big step against FSR by making the feature available to any developer.

Alongside a showcase of RTX features like DLSS running on an ARM-based computer, Nvidia announced that it would make the DLSS software development kit (SDK) available for anyone to download. Previously, developers would need to file an application with Nvidia to get their hands on the proprietary upscaling technology.

An visual explanation of how DLSS works.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Developers are now free to download and use the SDK, which is almost certainly a response to AMD’s open approach with FSR. Although announced a while ago, FSR just launched for the developers through AMD’s GPUOpen platform, and Nvidia’s sudden shift to make DLSS more accessible to developers puts some heat back on AMD.

Recommended Videos

The move takes one of FSR’s biggest features. In our FidelityFX Super Resolution review, we found it to be a competent but clearly inferior competitor to DLSS. However, we concluded FSR still stood out thanks to how accessible it was for developers, unlike DLSS. That has changed.

By opening the floodgates, Nvidia has made DLSS as easy for developers to use as FSR. That said, AMD’s feature still has a leg up in one area. Unlike DLSS, FSR works across multiple generations of graphics cards from AMD and Nvidia. DLSS uses Tensor cores that are only available on Nvidia RTX graphics cards, limiting the number of users that can take advantage of the feature.

In addition, DLSS has been available natively in the Unity game engine and as a plugin for Unreal Engine 5, so it’s not clear if the open availability will translate into more games supporting the feature.

As well as releasing the SDK, Nvidia updated it with new features. The current version now includes support for Linux, as well as a sharpening slider and an auto-exposure option for low contrast scenes. Both of these features are for developers to fine-tune DLSS in their games, not for the player.

Thankfully, the DLSS vs. FSR battle is one where gamers win. We’ve already seen games like Necromunda: Hired Gun, Marvel’s Avengers, and Edge of Eternity that support both technologies, allowing gamers to access a critical upscaling feature regardless of the GPU they own. The race is only starting to heat up, which should mean we’ll see more supported games down the line. And that’s exciting no matter which brand you have in your system.

Jacob Roach
Former Lead Reporter, PC Hardware
Jacob Roach is the lead reporter for PC hardware at Digital Trends. In addition to covering the latest PC components, from…
OpenAI’s Codex just moved into Chrome, where the useful work and the risks live
The new extension lets Codex move beyond coding and handle real browser tasks across signed-in sites
Page, Text, File

OpenAI is giving Codex a larger stage than the coding window. Its new Chrome extension lets the agent use an authenticated web session, so it can help with work that already lives inside Gmail, Salesforce, LinkedIn, dashboards, and internal apps.

That pushes Codex out of the developer sandbox and into the web apps where daily work already happens. With Chrome access, it can step into research, CRM updates, dashboard checks, and browser-based debugging, which is where plenty of work gets stuck across tabs.

Read more
MacBook Neo was such a smash hit for Apple that it might soon treat you to a price hike
The MacBook Neo's popularity didn't just create a supply problem for Apple; it exposed how fragile the $599 price point was to begin with, built on a one-time supply of discarded chips that was going to run out someday.
MacBook Neo

The $599 MacBook Neo has been flying off the shelves and online stores so fast that Apple has been forced to double its production target. Even now, when I’m writing this article, the shipping time on the official website is two to three weeks.

Semiconductor analyst Tim Culpan of Culpium claims that Apple has asked its manufacturing partners, Quanta and Foxconn, to increase the production capacity to 10 million units, nearly double the initial estimate. However, increasing production could cause a price problem for buyers very soon. 

Read more
Asus’ utterly sleek ExpertBook Ultra lands in the US with an utterly baffling price tag
This Asus ExpertBook Ultra looks stunning, then you see the $3,600 price
ASUS ExpertBook Ultra promo material

Asus has brought its top-of-the-line ExpertBook to the US, with specs that are genuinely impressive. But what's really jaw-dropping is the price tag. The ASUS ExpertBook Ultra is now available in the United States through the ASUS Store. It sits at the top of the company’s business laptop portfolio, with Asus positioning it as a flagship machine for professionals, executives, and enterprise users who want a premium AI-ready Windows laptop.

What's so special about this business laptop?

Read more