Guest doomgod12345 Posted August 19, 2000 ok i have been thinking that my mother board had PCI for the 3d card but now i think it may be AGP wich i want it to be. i dont know what i have and i dont want to take the 3d crad out to see is therte any way i can find out what i have with out removing the card 0 Share this post Link to post
Jon Posted August 19, 2000 Erm yeah, you look at the socket its plugged into. Short white = PCI, short brown + inset = AGP, long black = ISA 0 Share this post Link to post
masterhassan Posted August 20, 2000 go to c:/program files/directx adn click on dxdiag then go to display,at the bottom you will see 3 little bars directdreaw, direct3d agp, unless it says they're not available they should all be enabled, if it says agp is available then you've got it 0 Share this post Link to post
sirgalahadwizar Posted August 20, 2000 Uh oh, but wait a minute... I don't have anything in my directx directory except a sub-directory called "setup", and the only programs in that one are the setup.exe, DxInfo, and DxTool 0 Share this post Link to post
bitstate Posted August 20, 2000 this might be the thread.... :O) some days ago i bought a riva tnt2 (agp) only to find out that my mother board didn't have any agp slot (wierd isn't it since my board is from 1998.. ?), so i had to return it to the shop, however it turns out that another shop sells the same card but with a pci connection. so.. what do i loose by going for the pci version (i mean do i severely loose performance or anything) ? 0 Share this post Link to post
Jon Posted August 20, 2000 sirgalahadwizar said:Uh oh, but wait a minute... I don't have anything in my directx directory except a sub-directory called "setup", and the only programs in that one are the setup.exe, DxInfo, and DxTool Yeah this is a rather dumb-ass idea, you can't beat actually looking at the damn motherboard. 0 Share this post Link to post
Jon Posted August 20, 2000 bitstate said:this might be the thread.... :O) some days ago i bought a riva tnt2 (agp) only to find out that my mother board didn't have any agp slot (wierd isn't it since my board is from 1998.. ?), so i had to return it to the shop, however it turns out that another shop sells the same card but with a pci connection. so.. what do i loose by going for the pci version (i mean do i severely loose performance or anything) ? Hmm well agp is faster than pci because it a higher bitrate (hmm not sure 'bout this but isnt pci 16bit and agp 32, or is it 32/64?) and so pushes em faster. I haven't benchmarked it though, and dont have anything to hand. 0 Share this post Link to post
Guest T-N-T Posted August 21, 2000 Teppic said:Erm yeah, you look at the socket its plugged into. Short white = PCI, short brown + inset = AGP, long black = ISA Well Teppic, you know your expansion slots now don't you. I'm impressed. I'm currently going to College to be a Microcomputer Specialist and I've seen plenty of that crap :) 0 Share this post Link to post
Jon Posted August 21, 2000 Hehe after seeing and experiencing the computer sales industry in england I really think you shouldn't own a computer unless you can name every component in the machine and build it up... In one case, someone sent their machine away to have the CD-ROM replaced, and it came back fine... although what he didnt know is his processor, motherboard and memory were downgraded to poorer components. 0 Share this post Link to post
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