Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards May 26th, 2004 |
| Replies: 4 Views: 3,598 Yeah, anything that has ammonia in it is a bad idea.
I use 100% isopropyl alcohol here at work, and store bought isopropyl at home. Hasn't damaged any coatings. |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Jan 29th, 2004 |
| Replies: 12 Views: 18,017 AMD's are all sockets, I doubt it's that.
Sounds like a power supply issue, or something could be grounding out.
Take everything out of your case including the motherboard, and put it all... |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Nov 17th, 2003 |
| Replies: 6 Views: 3,608 Oh yeah. You're the one with PCI only.
Build another computer, seriously. You're not going to have graphics worth a damn with that 9200. |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Nov 17th, 2003 |
| Replies: 6 Views: 3,608 You'd be better off with a 9600. |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Nov 11th, 2003 |
| Replies: 6 Views: 3,608 Have you installed the latest Catalyst drivers? |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Nov 1st, 2003 |
| Replies: 11 Views: 5,201 http://www.ati.com/products/radeon9200/radeon9200/specs.html
Just because you can install DirectX 9.0b doesn't mean your video card can magically do the hardware tasks that the DirectX 9 API is... |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Oct 31st, 2003 |
| Replies: 11 Views: 5,201 Just because you can install it doesn't mean it's going to use the hardware features of DX9 worth a shit.
Pixel Shaders aren't that huge of deal with today's games...give it six months and you'll... |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Oct 31st, 2003 |
| Replies: 11 Views: 5,201 No, it does not support DX9.
You can install DX9, but the card won't be able to support any of the extra features that DX9 has because it just isn't capable of such.
No current game makes use... |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Oct 31st, 2003 |
| Replies: 8 Views: 3,335 No PCI 9600. The reason why is because the PCI bus is limited to 132MB of bandwidth, while an AGP slot can scale to multiple gigabytes because it's dedicated for such a thing.
Yes, same... |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Oct 27th, 2003 |
| Replies: 35 Views: 12,073 Or you could purchase a Radeon 9600 Pro for less than that 5600 and have stellar frame rates, along with some AA and AF to boot.
nVidia is a joke. They don't care about image quality. It's all... |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Oct 16th, 2003 |
| Replies: 2 Views: 3,050 Exactly.
Even electric runs for an outlet can cause a monitor to go wonky. Or could just be a funky monitor. No way to really tell, unless you figure out the problem that is. :mrgreen: |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Oct 11th, 2003 |
| Replies: 14 Views: 9,342 Nevermind, I get it. Doh!
In any case, I don't think anyone should fiddle with the inside of a monitor unless they know exactly what's going on. Too much risk involved. |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Oct 9th, 2003 |
| Replies: 14 Views: 9,342 This should be the first option.
Don't tear the monitor apart unless you know what's going on behind there. |
Forum: Monitors, Displays and Video Cards Oct 8th, 2003 |
| Replies: 16 Views: 8,248 There are tons of plugins available for Motherboard Monitor. mbm.livewiredev.com is the place to obtain that.
It works with vitually any chipset available. It's an awesome little utility.
... |