Neither Nvidia nor Adobe will ever fix that. All support for that particular GPU has completely ended back in 2018. If your GT 730 is of the 96 CUDA core variant, then you have a re-branded GeForce GT 430, a GPU that dated back over 10 years now. ![]() ![]() How many CUDA cores does your GT 730 have? 96? 384? ![]() Whew! And I had many times in the past advised everyone against the 128-bit versions of the GT 730, which used a much older GPU than the 64-bit versions of that GPU model. The more desirable variant of the GT 730 should have "GK208" and "384" for the GPU and the CUDA cores, respectively. If the GPU reads "GF108" and the CUDA cores read "96," then you have a GT 730 that's a rebadged GT 430. To determine whether you have the Fermi or Kepler variant of the GT 730, download and install/run GPU-Z. ![]() However, Premiere Pro 2020 now requires a driver version higher than 430 (which is completely incompatible with your GPU) just to even be supported in Premiere Pro 2020 for GPU acceleration at all. As such, NVIDIA had EOL'd all driver support for the Fermi GPUs back in 2018, with the very last driver supporting Fermi (391.35) released way back in March of that year. As Neil told you, you might have the version of the GT 730 that actually dates way back to the days of the old GT 430 from 2010 in fact, your 730 is probably a rebadged 430.
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