![]() If you didn't drop a grand on a new GPU this past year, you'll have to use an alternate operating system with less demanding storage requirements. If you have an RTX 4090 or RX 7900 XTX or a GPU with more than 20 GB of VRAM then you should be able to squeeze a vanilla Windows 11 installation onto the VRAM drive you created. RTX 3050 (desktop) with four of the eight memory slots populated. You'll need to change just a couple of defaults in Hyper-V, and you can pick those out in NTDEV's video. ![]() NTDEV used Windows' baked-in Hyper-V manager, which is a simple yet powerful tool for spawning virtual machines available to Windows 10 and 11 Pro, Education, and Enterprise users. Step two is to use your pick of tools to create a virtual machine. It only takes a couple clicks but the tool was abandoned before it reached stability, so you might need to try it a few times. There's an open-source tool that can do it for you called GpuRamDrive. Step one is to create a RAM drive in your GPU's memory. Well-known Windows modder NTDEV has demonstrated how, and it's surprisingly painless. WTF?! Now you can bypass your hard drive and store your whole operating system in your VRAM (should you want to).
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