Kurtsky Keigee Posted March 4, 2006 Share Posted March 4, 2006 Nice idea kaso bihira makahanap nun now e Quote Link to comment
azrach187 Posted March 4, 2006 Author Share Posted March 4, 2006 Why not go for Asrock939 Dual SATA 2? Socket 939 but can handle 2 vc's An AGP and PCI-E So you can keep your old AGP and you don't have to buy a new PCI-E its cheap too, around 3k only <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Almost all newly created mobos come with PCI-X and AGP. If you have done so in the past, you'd know that replacing a mobo is one of the hardest thing to do, hard-ware wise, in a PC. Simply open up your PC and find out. The usual route gamers take is this: upgrade everything except the mother board and processor. When the time comes to build another PC (or "upgrad" as some calls it), selecting the mobo/chipset/processor is the first decision to make, knowing it has to out last the rest of the periphery. And then the rest of the peripherals with vain obsession focused on the vid card. Vid cards are only half of the graphics package. Faster processors such as AMD 64 and Pentium D are the processors preferred by game creators. Having less than a gig in your memory would make you stare at the loadscreen, and of-course, for those on-line gamers, having a connection less than a T1 would be a never ending nightmare of "lag kills." Upgrading a mobo to accomodate a new vid card isn't worth it. Quote Link to comment
cheesekeso2004 Posted March 4, 2006 Share Posted March 4, 2006 Almost all newly created mobos come with PCI-X and AGP. If you have done so in the past, you'd know that replacing a mobo is one of the hardest thing to do, hard-ware wise, in a PC. Simply open up your PC and find out. The usual route gamers take is this: upgrade everything except the mother board and processor. When the time comes to build another PC (or "upgrad" as some calls it), selecting the mobo/chipset/processor is the first decision to make, knowing it has to out last the rest of the periphery. And then the rest of the peripherals with vain obsession focused on the vid card. Vid cards are only half of the graphics package. Faster processors such as AMD 64 and Pentium D are the processors preferred by game creators. Having less than a gig in your memory would make you stare at the loadscreen, and of-course, for those on-line gamers, having a connection less than a T1 would be a never ending nightmare of "lag kills." Upgrading a mobo to accomodate a new vid card isn't worth it.<{POST_SNAPBACK}> are you sure about your statement that almost ALL NEWLY CREATED mobos already comes w/ PCI-X and AGP? For AMD, there's only a two of them out there (939), the VIA VT8237R of the ECS K8T890-A, the Asrock Dual SATA 2 w/ ULi M1567 chipset, and I think 1 for 754. Intel has a few too, but none of then w/ the famed ULI chipset They are a rare breed And these breeds won't get any bigger, since most are focusing w/ PCI-X only Most comes w/ NForce4 which doesn't support it, VIA on the other hand, is a dying breed. ULI is the one who's surviving the chipset battle, so I don't think there'll be more AGP/PCI-X Combos in the future except the ULI chipset, which only comes w/ Asrock Yes, I've done it before, but simply to put it up, I regret doing the chop chop buying, where I stick to the proc and mobo, and then just upgrade everything else. PC's are investments, you buy them so you can use their full potential and deliver the best experience from it. But if you buy a pc (esp as a gamer) and keep complaining lag, reboots, etc etc etc, whats the use of buying a pc when its just a headache? yes, its hurts the pocket, but compared to the experience and the quality that you'll get, priceless. Upgrading the mobo (w/ the AGP and PCI-X slot) is a smart choice, given the situation, you don't have to worry about any frther upgrades, yes, you need to buy a new proc, but at least half of your headaches are gone. most other peripherals are simply plug and play again so no worry for total revamp Quote Link to comment
azrach187 Posted March 5, 2006 Author Share Posted March 5, 2006 (edited) are you sure about your statement that almost ALL NEWLY CREATED mobos already comes w/ PCI-X and AGP? For AMD, there's only a two of them out there (939), the VIA VT8237R of the ECS K8T890-A, the Asrock Dual SATA 2 w/ ULi M1567 chipset, and I think 1 for 754. Intel has a few too, but none of then w/ the famed ULI chipset They are a rare breed And these breeds won't get any bigger, since most are focusing w/ PCI-X only Most comes w/ NForce4 which doesn't support it, VIA on the other hand, is a dying breed. ULI is the one who's surviving the chipset battle, so I don't think there'll be more AGP/PCI-X Combos in the future except the ULI chipset, which only comes w/ Asrock Yes, I've done it before, but simply to put it up, I regret doing the chop chop buying, where I stick to the proc and mobo, and then just upgrade everything else. PC's are investments, you buy them so you can use their full potential and deliver the best experience from it. But if you buy a pc (esp as a gamer) and keep complaining lag, reboots, etc etc etc, whats the use of buying a pc when its just a headache? yes, its hurts the pocket, but compared to the experience and the quality that you'll get, priceless. Upgrading the mobo (w/ the AGP and PCI-X slot) is a smart choice, given the situation, you don't have to worry about any frther upgrades, yes, you need to buy a new proc, but at least half of your headaches are gone. most other peripherals are simply plug and play again so no worry for total revamp <{POST_SNAPBACK}>Okay. You brought a lot of good point. First I said "Almost all." In the end, it is depending on the BRAND of the mobo you are buying (yes, including new ones). I have recently checked Newegg.com, one of the best place to buy peripherals (in US atleast), and I have found this out:Pent. 4/ D Compatible mobos (as of Mar. 5 2006) ABIT: 2 mobos with AGP, 1 mobos without AGPAlbatron: 1 with, 1 without.AOpen: 1 with, 4 without.ASRock: 2 with, 1 without.ASUS: 7 with, 4 without.Biostar:3 with, 1 without.DFI: 1 with, 0 without.ECS: 1 with, 0 without.Epox: 3 with, 1 without.EVGA: 0 with, 1 without.Foxcon: 3 with, 4 without.Gb: 6 with, 5 without.Intel: 0 with, 8 without.Jetway: 4 with, 0 without.MSI: 5 with, 4 without.PC Chips: 2 with, 0 without. AMD 64/Sempron Compatible mobos (as of Mar. 5 2006) ABIT: 3 mobos with AGP, 9 mobos without AGPAlbatron: 2 with, 4 without.AOpen: 2 with, 3 without.ASRock: 5 with, 3 without.ASUS: 8 with, 20 without.Biostar: 9 with, 13 without.Chaintech. 2 with 1 without.DFI: 5 with, 14 without.ECS: 7 with, 14 without.Epox: 9 with, 10 without.EVGA: 1 with, 0 without.Foxcon: 3 with, 9 without.Gb: 6 with, 8 without.Jetway: 6 with, 7 without.Mach Speed: 3 with, 0 without.MSI: 3 with, 12 without.PC Chips: 8 with, 0 without.Sapphire: 0 with, 2 without.Shuttle 2 with, 0 without.Soltek: 9 with, 5 without.Soyo: 1 with, 0 without. As you can see, AGP isn't going away soon. yes, AMD supports AGP much more than Intel does and if you noticed, Intel brushes AGP slots on the new mobos. Note that I used Pent. 4/Celeron D and AMD 64/Sempron since these guys are currently the industry leaders. A recent news article on nVidia announces continued support for AGP based PCs for the 7000 series. Edited March 5, 2006 by azrach187 Quote Link to comment
cheesekeso2004 Posted March 5, 2006 Share Posted March 5, 2006 Lolz Yeah, AGP won't go away that quick And to be exact, a new version of AGP is on the way (16x and 32x is in the process ) But what I meant there arer mobos w/ AGP and PCI-X Since, this way, no such hassles are needed w/ future expansions Case and point another great mobo of asrock, the SLI32, which in SLI mode, will run both vc's @ 16x Although there's no AGP slot, an AMD M2 expansion slot is already included there And it's below 100 dollars very very cheap Anyway, i don't buy much in Newegg Too commercialized I still go for Monarch Anyway, I only buy during sales I get 'em cheaper hahaha Monarch's the best place in getting OEM highly overclockable procs (0530 production dates ) and some great bundles of course, other stuffs, still goes to Newegg Quote Link to comment
rendel_box Posted March 11, 2006 Share Posted March 11, 2006 I have a question I just installed NFS Most Wanted in my PC, and I saw that the minimum requirements for the game are 1.0Ghz Processor64 MB vid card256 MB ram I have a 1.7 G Processor, 128 Mb Geforce 5200 and 512 DDRam My question is, Why does the game graphics SUCK?!? It's so choppy, and even on the lowest video settings, i cannot run the game smoothly. Is there something wrong with my specs? Im trying to download the latest nvidia driver and see if this would fix the problem. any tips? Quote Link to comment
Anaheim Posted March 11, 2006 Share Posted March 11, 2006 I have a question I just installed NFS Most Wanted in my PC, and I saw that the minimum requirements for the game are 1.0Ghz Processor64 MB vid card256 MB ram I have a 1.7 G Processor, 128 Mb Geforce 5200 and 512 DDRam My question is, Why does the game graphics SUCK?!? It's so choppy, and even on the lowest video settings, i cannot run the game smoothly. Is there something wrong with my specs? Im trying to download the latest nvidia driver and see if this would fix the problem. any tips?<{POST_SNAPBACK}> your 128 mb Geforce 5200 is below standard, the standard being the 5500 series. Still if you one your games with fluid movements buy a video card above the 5500 series. Quote Link to comment
Dr. House Posted March 11, 2006 Share Posted March 11, 2006 guys can anyone of you post a link regarding benchmark comparisons of current video cards? thanks! Quote Link to comment
Joblow Posted March 13, 2006 Share Posted March 13, 2006 your 128 mb Geforce 5200 is below standard, the standard being the 5500 series. Still if you one your games with fluid movements buy a video card above the 5500 series.<{POST_SNAPBACK}> Kaya siguro hirap ang Age of Empire 3 sa akin. 5200 din ang video card ko Quote Link to comment
jimithing Posted March 14, 2006 Share Posted March 14, 2006 whats the best buy agp midrange vidcard now? im planning to upgrade my ati 9600 xt Quote Link to comment
MTBCommuter Posted March 15, 2006 Share Posted March 15, 2006 Mine is still the outdated and anemic GEFORCEFX5200.Hope to upgrade it very soon, Quote Link to comment
Kurtsky Keigee Posted March 15, 2006 Share Posted March 15, 2006 Sa 5500 most games can run on medium settings pero hirap pa.. Quote Link to comment
ElRey Posted March 15, 2006 Share Posted March 15, 2006 can you also post prices? so we can appreciate what we can look forward to? I'm sure a lot of you can give ballpark figures on some of these Video Cards? Thanks Quote Link to comment
cheesekeso2004 Posted March 15, 2006 Share Posted March 15, 2006 6600gt is the mid end card today if you have more money to sparem either 6800gs or 7600gt Quote Link to comment
Kurtsky Keigee Posted March 15, 2006 Share Posted March 15, 2006 yup 6600 Is the best bang for you buck todayAround 7-8k u can get one.And if u spend a little more u can get GT for around 10k if im not mistakenWith that card almost all games out today will work with decent to high settings Quote Link to comment
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