News19 mins ago
Upgrading Graphics Cards
I am considering up-grading my Radeon X1550 as the newer games on the market are causing 'jerky movements' during play. I was thinking about a 512 mb card but I see my installed card is 'up to 896 mb'. Does any-one know what this means?
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No best answer has yet been selected by dave068. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Not an expert on graphics cards, but I THINK it means it uses a combination of memory on the graphics card AND some of your REAL memory (RAM) to get up to 896Mb.
So it may be the graphics card has say 256 on it, but you can define the rest from your real memory.
Not sure how or where you actually specify that though.
So it may be the graphics card has say 256 on it, but you can define the rest from your real memory.
Not sure how or where you actually specify that though.
vhg is hiding his light
he's right on all counts
I have a couple of favourite sellers - shopbt, oyyy and eclipse (pretty standard) - but google is your friend - use it
http://www.google.co.uk/products?hl=en&q=radeo n%20graphics%20card&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wf
it's impossible to say which without knowing your budget
the development path is about every 6 months - so they are always out of date
look in a couple of mags
he's right on all counts
I have a couple of favourite sellers - shopbt, oyyy and eclipse (pretty standard) - but google is your friend - use it
http://www.google.co.uk/products?hl=en&q=radeo n%20graphics%20card&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=N&tab=wf
it's impossible to say which without knowing your budget
the development path is about every 6 months - so they are always out of date
look in a couple of mags
buying the graphics card will depend on your motherboard these days.
currently, the generation of PCI-E is 2.0 which has double the bandwidth of PCI-E x16. most of the newer cards are 2.0, but are backwards compatible with x16. but to do this they are not performing at their peak, which means wasting money.
as a rule of thumb, if your PC is older than18 months then the current generation of grapic cards are too powerful.
my suggestion of a graphics card will be an ATI 3000 series or a nVidia 8000 series (maybe 9000 series).
currently, the generation of PCI-E is 2.0 which has double the bandwidth of PCI-E x16. most of the newer cards are 2.0, but are backwards compatible with x16. but to do this they are not performing at their peak, which means wasting money.
as a rule of thumb, if your PC is older than18 months then the current generation of grapic cards are too powerful.
my suggestion of a graphics card will be an ATI 3000 series or a nVidia 8000 series (maybe 9000 series).