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NB | OS | CPU | Memory | NPU | GPU |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
AMD | 24H2 (OS build 26120.3576) Windows 11 Pro | AMD Ryzen AI 9 HX 370 w/ Radeon 890M | 32GB | NPU Compute Accelerator Device | AMD Radeon™ 890M Graphics |
Intel | 24H2 (OS build 26120.3585) Windows 11 Pro | Intel® Core™ Ultra 5 238V | 32GB | Intel® AI Boost | Intel® Arc™ 130V GPU (16GB) |
Qualcomm | 24H2 (OS build 26120.3360) Windows 11 Pro | Snapdragon® Xlite - X1E78100 - Qualcomm® Oryon™ CPU | 32GB | Snapdragon® Xlite - X1E78100 - Qualcomm® Oryon™ NPU (16GB) | Qualcomm® Adreno™ X1-85 GPU (GB) |
I tested three laptops with specifications listed in the table above and found that the Image Super Resolution function behaves differently across platforms.
On AMD and QC devices, the code stops at if (!ImageScaler.IsAvailable())
, while on the Intel device, it stops at _imageScaler = await ImageScaler.CreateAsync();
.