I'm running W7, 6core+6extra and 2 NVIDIA 750 GPUs, but Einstein only finds one!
It's actually BOINC that detects your hardware. A given project may use what BOINC detects. It won't change what BOINC detects and BOINC may not correctly detect anyway.
On checking for computers listed under the account you posted with, there are none showing that have contacted the project in the last 30 days so I'm rather at a loss to understand how "Einstein only finds one" when no contact appears to have been made recently.
I checked your 'old' computers and, yes, there is a machine that shows as having 2 x 750Ti GPUs (not 750s) but it last made contact back in January this year, so I guess that can't be the machine you're currently describing with 750 GPUs. You actually have 3 old host IDs listed. Is there any possibility that one of them might now be contacting the project under a different ID as part of a different account to the one you posted under? If you could post all the startup messages from the event log of the machine in question, we might be able to identify what is going on.
Jacques Prunonosa wrote:I'm
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It's actually BOINC that detects your hardware. A given project may use what BOINC detects. It won't change what BOINC detects and BOINC may not correctly detect anyway.
On checking for computers listed under the account you posted with, there are none showing that have contacted the project in the last 30 days so I'm rather at a loss to understand how "Einstein only finds one" when no contact appears to have been made recently.
I checked your 'old' computers and, yes, there is a machine that shows as having 2 x 750Ti GPUs (not 750s) but it last made contact back in January this year, so I guess that can't be the machine you're currently describing with 750 GPUs. You actually have 3 old host IDs listed. Is there any possibility that one of them might now be contacting the project under a different ID as part of a different account to the one you posted under? If you could post all the startup messages from the event log of the machine in question, we might be able to identify what is going on.
Cheers,
Gary.