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BloodfleshX

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Posts posted by BloodfleshX

  1. I see - it's a prebuilt. Problem with upgrading one of them is that they tend to use power supplies that only just cover components that come with the pc. You would probably have to upgrade psu as well, because any decent gfx card nowadays would draw more power than a 2400. I'd recommend a Corsair VX450 and a Radeon 4850 - prices would vary depending on where you live.

     

     

     

    Edit: I forgot to ask, what's the resolution of your hdtv? 1080p or 720p?

  2. Sorry to say that that computer won't run Crysis maxed at DX10 and high resolution (> 1680x1050 with AA/ AF post processing turned to very high) possibly you will get frames in the mid 20s, playable but will drop down during the ice levels and firefights.

     

     

     

    Looks like the computer he stated buying comes with a 19" monitor, so the max resolution will be 1440*900. Even then it would be hard put to get what most most people consider adequete framerates (>30) at Very High settings. It would probably run at High settings quite comfortably though.

  3. 1st option has a low end gpu from 2 generations of video cards ago (which wasn't a very good generation anyway) and both 2nd and 3rd computers you chose have integrated gpus, which perform pathetically for any modern game. Really, I'd look for something with more grunt, but as snipersas asked, are you willing to assemble your own pc? You'll get a lot more performance per dollar that way. But if it really came down to it, the 1st option is best and should be able to play Orange Box (lowest settings + resolution), but not well.

  4. I'd go with an ATI, especially considering this kick-[wagon] serie.

     

    They run hot, because the fan is only at 35% or something, they card can handle the heat and you don't hear the fan. And you can always up the fan more if you want to.

     

    4850 is less power hungry than 9800GTX(+ too), and 4870 - GTX 260 only differs about 10c.

     

     

     

    I believe the speed setting differs from brands. When I got my 4850 fan speed was at 27% and I've known other people to have as low 20%. 4850/70 are built to handle high temps (tjc of 120 degrees I believe) but you also got to consider other pc parts, that aren't meant to handle such high temps. You can up the fan speed, and I did to lower temps to around 50 degrees (setting fan speed at 50%) but then noise level does come into consideration. Looking at that graph, 4850s @ around 6-70W? That seems a little too low to me. Anyways, power consumption is really only a minor consideration in the grand scheme of things, but a consideration nonetheless.

  5. I have got a lot of advice irl and on forums telling me to try and get the geforce as opposed to ATi.

     

     

     

    It really depends on what you consider most important in a graphics card. This generation ATI's offering (4850, 4870/X2) beat Nvidia's (260, 280 gtx) in terms of price/performance. But, the ATI's run hotter and consume more electricity when idle. Personally I'd go for a 4850 or 4870.

  6. Only except Hypermemory/Turbocache is only found in low end solutions with the best Nvidia Card having it being the 8500GT and X1650 for ATI

     

     

     

    My mistake. Regardless, the approx. total memory is the sum of the dedicated vram, and the shared system ram (including page file).

  7. It might be but that doesnt explain Errdoth's 8800GTS using 2654mb when its actually 640mb, on dxdiag it says I have 1275mb of approx. total memory when my 3870 is supposed to have 512 so the extra I assume is from the RAM that is used when the GPU RAM is full.

     

     

     

    It does actually explain why. Like I said, the graphics card borrows system memory, and dxdaig is reading the graphics card using its own ram AND system ram combined.

  8. Can anyone tell me where I can find how much Watt my PSU has

     

     

     

    Only way to check is by taking a look at the psu itself.

     

     

     

    The problem with prebuilts is that they usually chuck in a generic power supply that just covers the specs for the computer. I wouldn't bother upgrading unless psu is upgraded as well, because a dedicated graphcs card will take a lot more power than an integrated chipset. Download Pc Wizard and run that. Should show what type of motherboard you have, which would show if you have the right pcie slots for the graphics card in the first place.

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