The app stores are here to complete your experience. At least that’s what we think when we use both the Google Play Store on Android and the App Store on iOS. They’re the most popular and there’s no major developer who boasts himself as such who doesn’t have his application available in one or both of them.
The Windows Application Store should provide applications to the number of potential users for the most durable system. A statement that is far from true is that Microsoft finds it difficult for developers to put their trust in its shop. So it’s surprising that a company like AMD, which relied on the Windows 10 Store to offer the software for their graphics.
And they were released with three applications: AMD Display Optimizations, AMD Graphics Profile, and AMD Radeon Settings Lite. Let’s see what they offer:
AMD Display Optimizations
With the first, the one that responds to the name AMD Display Optimizations, we find an app designed to improve the quality of the image displayed on the screen. It allows you to activate or deactivate the various options of the graphic in relation to the quality of the image on the screen. The only requirement is that we need a monitor and an AMD Radeon graphics card compatible with FreeSync.
Download | AMD Display Optimizations
AMD Graphics
The second application is AMD Graphics Profile, an app that offers various profiles that either focus on saving energy through power reduction or, if we need them, increase performance. Different profiles such as Game Mode, Balanced Mode and Energy Saving Mode are offered.
Download | AMD Graphic Profile
AMD Radeon Lite
Finally, we’d like to talk about the AMD Radeon Settings Lite App, an application that allows users of an AMD Radeon graphics card to control the graphics processor through a simple and attractive interface.
Download | AMD Radeon Settings Lite
This is an interesting movement that AMD is making because it makes it much easier to control the hardware for compatible devices by offering applications in the Windows Store that prevent us from having to navigate through different websites. Although these apps came into the Microsoft Store via Project Centennial, we know that this is the first step in adapting to a modern application design.