Nvidia kills Windows XP-era Control Panel "after 20 years of dedicated service"
3 hour ago / Read about 7 minute
Source:ArsTechnica
Nvidia says the Control Panel's features have been migrated to the Nvidia app.


Credit: Andrew Cunningham

Shiny new Nvidia apps like the GeForce Experience and the “Nvidia app” have come and gone, but the old Nvidia Control Panel and its rotating green Nvidia logo have existed as an option for managing basic settings since it was originally introduced in 2006.

That’s ending with version 610.47 of Nvidia’s Game Ready and Studio drivers for GeForce GPUs. Nvidia says the old Control Panel will no longer be installed by default, since “all actively supported Nvidia Control Panel features for GeForce users have been modernized and transitioned” to the new Nvidia app.

“The NVIDIA app contains all of the modern functionality of the NVIDIA Control Panel available for GeForce RTX GPUs, and much more, while running faster and more efficiently,” writes Nvidia Technical Marketing Content Editor Andrew Burnes in the drivers’ release notes.

The Nvidia app also offers more advanced features than the Control Panel app had, including driver updates and DLSS overrides for using newer upscaling models with games that only natively support older DLSS versions.

If you already have the old Control Panel installed on your system, installing the new driver version won’t remove it unless you perform a clean install. If you lose the Control Panel and want to get it back, it will be available for the time being as a separate Microsoft Store download, but Nvidia will no longer update it with new features or fixes.

At least for now, the Control Panel will continue to be installed for users of RTX Pro, RTX, and Quadro GPUs using Nvidia’s workstation drivers, since Nvidia hasn’t migrated all of the relevant professional features from the Control Panel to the Nvidia app.

As best as I can tell from Reddit and Internet Archive sleuthing, the Nvidia Control Panel as it currently exists was introduced in February of 2006 in the ForceWare 83.60 driver package. The old GeForce 7 series was Nvidia’s latest and greatest at the time, but the Control Panel would have been available on cards as old as the GeForce 2 MX, which was released way back in 2000.

The look and feel of the Control Panel has changed little since then, mirroring Windows itself: There’s a new, modern, shiny app that handles almost every setting you could want to change, but you’re never more than a couple of clicks away from a Windows NT-style dialog box that looks almost the same now as it did 25 years ago.

The Guru3D forum thread about the then-new ForceWare release shows there are some constants in computing and software development. Multiple users complain about feature regressions or about not being able to open the new Control Panel at all. One remarks on the size of the download (a whopping 45MB).

“New cpanel works for me but I dont like the new panel,” writes one poster. “Old one pwns it.”