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Home > Computers > Computer Components > Graphics Cards > Buying Guide
The graphics card
is a vital performance component of your computer, particularly if you play
3D games, or work with graphics and video content. The graphics card sits in
an expansion card slot in your PC and it is specifically designed to process
image data and output it to your monitor, enabling you to see it.
A graphics card works by calculating how images appear, particularly 3D images,
and renders them to the screen. 3D images and video images take a lot of processing
capacity, and many graphics processors are complex, require fans to cool them and
need direct power supply. The graphics card consists of a graphics processor, a
memory chip for graphics operations, and a RAMDAC for display output. It may
also include video capture, TV output and SLI and other functions.
You can find the graphics card that suits you by comparing specification
between brands and vendors on Myshopping.com.au
At Myshopping.com.au you can compare a great range of appliances, and assess
them according to their specifications, brands, prices and vendors.
What are your needs?
The first decision you need to make is whether you need a graphics card for
handling 3D images or whether you are simply requiring 2D image rendering.
For 2D requirements, you need only a low-cost solution. In many cases, an
integrated graphics solution will suffice for 2D applications.
However with 3D graphics, the performance of the graphics card will impact
directly on the frame rate and image quality of 3D programs and games. The
differences between the low and high-end cards can be substantial, both
in cost and performance.
Rendering 3D graphics is like lighting a stage, both the geometry of the
shapes in question and the lighting of it need to be taken into account.
The geometry of an image calculates the parts of an object that can and
can't be seen, the position of the eye and its perspective. The lighting
is a calculation of the direction of the light sources, their intensities
and the respective shadows that occur. The second part to presenting a 3D
image is the rendering of colours and textures to the surfaces of the
objects, and modifying them according to light and other factors.
Most modern graphics cards include a small microchip called the Graphics
Processing Unit (GPU), which are provide the algorithms and memory to process
complex images. They reduce the workload of the main CPU, and provide faster
processing. Different graphics cards have different capabilities in terms of
processing power. They can render and refresh images up to 60 or more times
per second, calculate shadows quickly, create image depth by rendering distant
objects at low resolution, modify surface textures fluidly and eliminate
pixelation.
Most Requested Graphics CardsWhat Specifications to ConsiderProcessor clock speed
This impacts on the rendering capability of the GRU. The clock speed itself is not the critical factor. Rather it is the per-clock performance of the graphics processor, which is indicated by the number of pixels it can process per clock cycle. Memory size
This is the memory capacity that is used exclusively for graphics operations, and can be as much as 512MB. The more demanding your graphics applications are, the better you will be served with more memory on your graphics card. 16-32M 64M 128M 256M 512M 640M and more Memory bandwidth
One thing that can slow down 3D graphics performance is the speed at which the computer delivers information to the graphics processor. A higher bandwidth means a faster data transfer, resulting in faster rendering speeds. Shader model
DirectX Shader Models allows developers control over the appearance of an image as it is rendered on screen, introducing visual effects like multi-layered shadows, reflection and fog. Fill rate
This is the speed at an image can be rendered or "painted". This rate is specified in texels per second, the number of 3D pixels that can be painted per second. A texel is a pixel with depth (3D). The fill rate comes from the combined performance of the clock speed of the processor and the number of pixels it can process per clock cycle, and will tell you how quickly an image can be fully rendered on screen. Vertices/triangles
Graphics chips don't work on curves, rather they process flat surfaces. A curve is created by multiple flat planes arranged to look like a curve. 3D objects are created with multiple triangular surfaces, sometimes hundreds or even thousands, tessellated to represent the curves and angles of the real world. 3D artists are concerned with the number of polygons required to form a shape. There are two different types of specification: vertices per second (I.e., angles the triangles), and triangles per second. To compare one measure with the other, you have to take into account the fact that adjacent triangles share vertices. Anti-aliasing
A technique used to smooth images by reducing the jagged stepping effect caused by diagonal lines and square pixels. Different levels of anti-aliasing have different effects on performance. RAMDAC
The Random Access Memory Digital to Analogue Converter takes the image data and converts it to a format that your screen can use. A faster RAMDAC means that the graphics card can support higher output resolutions. Some cards have multiple RAMDACs allowing that card to support multiple displays. TV-out
Some graphics cards provide the option to connect a television via either a composite (RCA) or S-Video connector. TV Out S-video Out S-video In and S-video Out (VIVO) YPbPr Connection for HDTV DVI
Some graphics cards include a connector for DVI monitors, handy because a lot of LCD screens support DVI. DVI offers better image quality than the standard VGA connector. Dual-head
Dual-head is a term used when two monitors are used side by side, stretching your desktop across both. SLI (Scalable Link Interface.)
With SLI you can couple two graphics cards in your computer, enabling each card to take half the rendering thereby doubling the performance.
When considering your graphics card, it pays to think about how much you need your
computer to process your graphics output. Using a high end graphics card with a high
pixels per clock rating, large memory, fast processor and other features means that
you can run the latest games efficiently, or work in intensive graphics development.
Different Models
While there are many vendors of graphics cards, there are actually only two major manufacturers of
chips for graphics cards. Nearly every graphics card on the market features a chip manufactured by
either ATI or Nvidia. Cards using the same graphics chip will perform roughly the same as each other.
However, even though they use the same chip, some feature slightly higher clock speeds, as well as
manufacturer guaranteed overclocking-an even higher clock speed than that specified. Other factors
that will influence your decision should include the amount of memory a card has (128MB, 256MB, 512MB)
and its additional features, such as TV-Out and dual-screen support.
Use the search facilities at Myshopping.com.au to compare the features, prices and vendors
of graphics cards.
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