My journey with discrete graphic cards
Picture taken from Gigabyte.my
A discrete graphics card is an add-on card that is attached to the motherboard, as opposed to an integrated graphics controller you get on most low-medium end motherboards.
My first taste of better graphics came in the form of a Voodoo 2 that I bought along with my PC while I was still in university. Lets see if I can recall the graphic cards that I have used so far:
- Voodoo 2 (lets start with this 16 MB of RAM goodness).
- Nvidia Geforce 4 MX 440 (a whopping 64MB RAM, or was it 32?).
- Nvidia Geforce 6800GS (256MB RAM).
- Nvidia Geforce 6800GS in SLI mode (I think I cooked these cards to death in my poorly ventilated casing).
- Nvidia GeForce 7200 as a stopgap measure because both the 6800s were unstable.
- ATI Radeon HD3850 (512MB RAM) from another friend trying to clear off stuff.
- and lastly, I am currently using an Nvidia Geforce GTX 560 (1GB RAM).
Lets see how long this will last me.
If only Diablo 3 came out sooner grrrr....
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