I agree evolucion8. He was concentrating on the memory. Most people don't know the difference between GDDR1, 2 and 3. I wouldn't upgrade from a 9800 Pro to a 6600GT either. Better agp cards out there on the market. Good post btw.
Since both my truck and car are manual 5 speeds I use the parking break every time just incase it decides to pop of gear. Had it happen to me on an old 82 Civic back in high school. Not fun chasing your car rolling down the street....not to mention not healty to you and others.
It depends on what games you want to play, but for the money you might consider upgrading to a SAPPHIRE 100209L Radeon X1950GT. For the money it is a very good performing agp card. It is about 30 bucks cheaper than the 1950Pro, and it performs very close to the 1950Pro. From reviews I?ve read...
The AGP keyed 6600GT's has a newer GPU operating at a higher clock of 500mhz over the 9800 Pro clock of 380mhz. The agp keyed 6600GT GDDR3 memory also operates at a higher clock of 900mhz over the 9800 Pro's GDDR1 memory clocked at 680mhz. The newer core and advanced architecture of the 6600GT...
I haven't had any experience with those two particular LCDs. However, I've had some clients in that similar price range get this 22" Acer AL2223Wd, and they have been very satisfied with them. Really good picture quality for a 22" LCD. I happen to prefer Samsung monitors, but thats just me. Of...
I researched this for you, and their manual also said support for socket 478 Pentium 4 Prescotts with no mention of support for Northwood procs. I would say it doesn't support them, but I would email Albatron and ask just to make sure.
Hello there pcsavvy.
As far as monitors are concerned, it is a personal taste, but if you are considering 20 to 24 inch LCDs, then I would go with 22 inch. The cost jump between 22 inches to 24 inches is quite a bit, and you can get a really nice 22 inch LCD for a pretty reasonable price...
Most systems will accept RIMM of different frequenices, but the system will default to the lowest speed. In this case, your system will default to the PC600. In addition, you will want to usually put the largest modules in the first pair of slots which would be the two 128mb sticks of rdram 800...
I've had this dilemma for myself and clients several different times. Monitors more that some other computer hardware really come down to personal taste. The best thing to do is really go to a local store where you can actually look at the monitors side by side and see what the quality is in...
His is probably the 32-bit PCI operating at 33MHz too which peak transfer rate on that puppy is going to be only 133mb/sec. To give you idea AGP x1 can support up to 256mb/sec, AGP x4 up to 1056mb/sec and AGP x8 up to 2112mb/sec.
Do you know what type of board and cpu he has? I'd just hate...
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