

Here is my system info and hackintosh specs: I have tried a couple of things but nothing has worked so far and if I need to reinstall macOS, it wouldn't be too big of a deal. My troubles probably stem from having an AMD card and being incompetent with multibeast, clover, clover configurator, and getting hackintosh drivers to work. I'm new to actually getting a hackintosh up and running. (mission control and especially launchpad) I'm assuming this because I have the non-transparent dock and annomations seem overall sluggish. Both the second and third monitors are connected via DVI using the DVI to HDMI (passive) adapters that were included in with my video card. One receives normal input (this is always the one connected via HDMI), second monitor only mirrors the first, and the third doesn't receive any signal. I have 3 identical 1080p monitors that I would like to use with my hack. Only one display is receiving proper signal.Only 7MB of vram is showing up in system report.I have just installed macOS on my pc (specs down below) and my GPU has three main issues: Hello! I am having problems trying to get my R9 390 to function normally inside macOS Sierra. The rest of the R9 300 series will reportedly be rebrands as well, which will disappoint AMD fans wanting to see a wide variety of new cards hit the market.Īs for the Radeon Fury, all reports indicate that AMD will launch this next-generation flagship card at an E3 event on June 16th.Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's Guide Other rumors have indicated that the R9 390X will be a slightly faster version of the R9 290X, while cards that feature AMD's new Fiji GPU will fall under "Radeon Fury" branding. Cards that do end up featuring a Fiji GPU will be limited to 4 GB of high-bandwidth (HBM) memory, as AMD has confirmed previously. While specifications for the card aren't shown in the picture, the inclusion of 8 GB of GDDR5 memory indicates this card won't use AMD's upcoming Fiji GPU. The card itself comes with two large fans atop a cooler that includes seven heat pipes, plus the usual selection of display outputs: two DVI, one HDMI, and one DisplayPort. On their product page for the XFX Radeon R9 290X Double Dissipation Edition, towards the bottom of the page the company has posted a picture of a box that clearly shows R9 390X branding. Graphics card manufacturer XFX has accidentally confirmed on their website that the upcoming AMD Radeon R9 390X is, in fact, a rebranded version of the R9 290X, which launched towards the end of 2013.
