The Atari 2600 game by Activision? Of course I do!
The Atari 2600 game by Activision? Of course I do!
Modern motherboard video chipsets will have an amount of RAM reserved for them in the BIOS, normally 64 -128MB sometimes more. If they need more they'll use some of the system RAM as wellThink I'll buy a PC soon and see how it goes w/whatever comes with. But again I don't get the impresssion they come with more than something like 16MB VRAM in most cases - ? That won't cut it for even a number of older (not ancient) games.
Depends where you go. If you're buying from a place that employs minimum wage drones then it's not surprising, but I bet the brochure or website will tell you. If you haven't already picked your PC - what sort of budget do you have? Does it need any non-standard bits for daily use? And to reiterate SSR what games are you looking at playing? 'Older' is not helpful, I picked up Deus Ex 2 on a budget label the other week so that's now an 'Older' game and that'd kill a GeForce 4 if you tried to ramp up the settingsAnd btw that's another thing that really peeves me is stores that sell systems seemed determined NOT to tell you anything about VRAM (ie what comes w/the system, no specs at all).
Wow - if true you just ended my interest in video cards.Modern motherboard video chipsets will have an amount of RAM reserved for them in the BIOS, normally 64 -128MB sometimes more. If they need more they'll use some of the system RAM as well
I'll ref. this in the "buying a PC" threadDepends where you go. If you're buying from a place that employs minimum wage drones then it's not surprising, but I bet the brochure or website will tell you. If you haven't already picked your PC - what sort of budget do you have? Does it need any non-standard bits for daily use? And to reiterate SSR what games are you looking at playing? 'Older' is not helpful, I picked up Deus Ex 2 on a budget label the other week so that's now an 'Older' game and that'd kill a GeForce 4 if you tried to ramp up the settings
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I think I had it on a Tandy machine. In fact I know I did.
Hmm...
*looks for emulator*

Speaking of ATI and Nvidia, how much weaker are these "video accelerators" that these 2 make and are popular toss-ins on PCs nowdays than a real video card? I get the basic diff (ie "stealing RAM vs having its own) but wonder in most cases, assuming you have the RAM to give, if it really matters much.
Or did we cover this already and I'm forgetful/too lazy to look up![]()
Even with 10GB of system RAM, a 'video accelerator' will suffer when having to access system memory instead of memory on the video card itself.Speaking of ATI and Nvidia, how much weaker are these "video accelerators" that these 2 make and are popular toss-ins on PCs nowdays than a real video card? I get the basic diff (ie "stealing RAM vs having its own) but wonder in most cases, assuming you have the RAM to give, if it really matters much.
Or did we cover this already and I'm forgetful/too lazy to look up![]()
That's some of the most unusual advice I've ever heard.
Ooh, AND modern music is rubbish, get yourself a gramophone player and listen to Tie A Yellow Ribbon Round The Old Oak Tree, that's much better than your new-fangled White Stripes.
Speaking of ATI and Nvidia, how much weaker are these "video accelerators" that these 2 make and are popular toss-ins on PCs nowdays than a real video card? I get the basic diff (ie "stealing RAM vs having its own) but wonder in most cases, assuming you have the RAM to give, if it really matters much.
Or did we cover this already and I'm forgetful/too lazy to look up![]()