for the price is this a good card?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814150247
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You can do a lot better than this one. Especially since it's a deactivated item. 8 series cards are outdated. Look for the GeForce 9 series and 2xx series or the ATI 4xxx series.
anlgp likes this. -
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130383
how bout that one?
and will it fit my computer?
http://support.gateway.com/s/PC/R/GTModels/5454/5454sp2.shtml -
I'd recommend the extra cash to get these:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814102803
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814133239
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814127383
The 4830 is the best bang for the buck IMO and all should fit your computer.anlgp likes this. -
should run on both windows and linux?
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anlgp likes this.
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what does this mean (the part in bold)?
# Intel® Graphics Media Accelerator 950
* Dynamic Video Memory Technology (DVMT) supports up to 224 MB of video memory
# PCI-Express (PCI-E ×16) slot available for upgrade -
That part refers to the video graphics chip located on your motherboard. It has nothing to do with whatever video card you plan to buy.
As for what card is best for you, that depends: how much is your budget, and what do you want to do with the video card?anlgp likes this. -
that and i just don't want on board stuff... -
For under $100, a card that will reliably handle Oblivion will be tough. The Radeon HD4830 suggested earlier is a solid value for the price point, especially if you overclock it, but it has a very tough time sustaining frame rates: you'll fluctuate from as high as 35 to as low as 3, depending on the game. The real trouble is your CPU: the Pentium Dual-Core is a sort of hackjob dual core processor: it's an old Pentium 4 with two cores, but the cores don't share memory, so it's less effective than you would think. I wanted to recommend you go outside your budget a little and pick up a Radeon HD4850 for $150 or so, but I think it'll go to waste with that CPU.
Go with the HD4830. Fits your price range, seems like a good match for your CPU, and you should hopefully get Oblivion running well on the lower settings. If you overclock it (using the Catalyst Control Center program that comes with the drivers) 15-20% above stock speeds, that should really help out. (Warning: don't take it too far.)anlgp likes this. -
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That would require a new motherboard, as the Core and Core 2 line of CPUs use a different type of CPU socket as the Pentium Dual Core. At that point you would be better off just buying the parts for a budget gaming system, around $500 or so, less if you can recycle items like the power supply, hard drive, and case from your current computer.
IMO, just for Oblivion, it's not worth going to all that trouble, and as a bonus the 4830 will handle movies just fine.anlgp likes this. -
thanks desides and regan :yes:
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how much is a new MOBO just out of curiosity?
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anlgp likes this.
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so say i was willing to spend about 150?
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Those parts will absolutely destroy Oblivion (which is quite the feat when you think about that phrase...) but again, you're practically building a new computer at this point. You have to ask yourself where your personal limit is, as spending this much just for one game is a lot. The upside is that you'll be able to run Oblivion with most or all of the eye candy on max.
My limit was $900, so I managed to get around some of these issues when I built my new PC last month. -
no just the video card.
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Then the 4850 I linked to is your ticket. But again, I think it's slightly overkill on a Pentium Dual Core system.
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what do you mean by overkill? and i could always use it at a later date on another computer if i build my own?
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By overkill, I mean that the 4850 won't be fully utilized by your system, as your CPU will be bottlenecking performance. Imagine a Ferrari stuck in rush hour traffic.
anlgp likes this. -
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i just put 4G of ram into this and from what i understand it's a somewhat decent computer but it is a few years old. 2/3.
i have 300G HD space. -
If you're planning on building a new PC in 1-2 years, buy the 4830 now, stick with what you have, and buy all-new components when you're ready to build. You won't do yourself any favors in 1-2 years if you decide to buy a Core i7 (or its successor) and slap a 4850 in there. Quite the opposite. -
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I've heard overclocking is dangerous.
True? -
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Oh. I have no idea what I'm doing with overclocking.
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The reviews are saying the 4830 is hot.
Is there a way to add anything in to help that out?
fans, etc?
willing to take picture of comp. -
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there's only one that i can see towards the back of the case but I think there's one towards the front too. -
What reviews are claiming the 4830 is hot? -
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http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...k=False&VendorMark=&Page=2&Keywords=(keywords)
some reviews there.
fans are expensive?
edit:
i don't think there is a spot for more fans :( -
Newegg reviews are useless. Ignore them.
The 4830 is fine. You don't need to add cooling.anlgp likes this. -
anlgp likes this.
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