PearlJam
Expert Member
What requires a good gfx card other than games? IOW if you don't play games why would anyone buy for instance a 7900gtx?
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CAD is one use and decoding of HD video (making it offload work from CPU, making the video smoother and giving it better quality) is another.
Well all depends on the richness of experience your willing to pay for ...... requires anything liek a 7900GT, you'll just basically need any mid range type card.
Yeh, should be plenty good for quite a while. In the future, if you have any spare cash, rather invest in a kick a$$ widescreen LCD to get full benefit.So basically the 7800gtx should take me a distance before i will upgrade say in 2 years time to DX10 if necessary? Basically i only want to upgrade the MB & CPU next year.
Well all depends on the richness of experience your willing to pay for ...
Imagine a scenario where you're running Vista with dual 1600 x 1200 (or higher) screens, have a multitude of 3D enhanced & HD video media apps opened with full 'eye candy' enabled (e.g. fades, scrolling, translucency, dynamic colour shading & shimmering), and of course to elliminate diagonal jaggies 4x anti-aliasing.
Suddenly the 7900GT is breathing quite hard to keep the desktop(s) smooth and responsive all the time.
... rather invest in a kick a$$ widescreen LCD to get full benefit.
Not likely for all, but I for one already work this way, currently without the full potential of Vista/Aero's HD & 3D capabilities.No.. I dont think thats a very likely scenario or that you will honestly ever need the top gaming card in the world just to run media apps..
Yep, no read it again, thats not going to happen. When will you have more than one HD video app open on both monitors, truth is that almost anyone will only ever use one screen (bit hard to use both) and you can hardly watch (never mind download) two HD videos at the same time.
Yes, you would be going a bit overboard by getting a 512 GTX just for your desktop now, as current mid-range cards will handle this quite easily.... you dont need a better card than a 7800GTX, even for Vista and doing a bit of video editing. Youd be foolish to waste another R6000 on a new card.
Yes, you would be going a bit overboard by getting a 512 GTX just for your desktop now, as current mid-range cards will handle this quite easily.
However when I extrapolate my environment to the full potential of what will be possible e.g.higher resolutions, far more 3D effects & functionality and HD media, the graphic horsepower starts climing quite rapidly.
If you can afford it, I dont see a problem with investing in hardware that will enable one to utilise the future possibilities as they come.
I don't think it makes much performance diffs to Vista if you have one large widescreen or 2 smallers ones? There are however some trade-offs in this decision, so you're going to have to choose based on what important to you.I already have the 7800gtxI was thinking about the dual monitor or single large monitor. What would be the best option with Vista in mind. I like the idea of how you work and have the same idea for myself. I looked a bit at info of Vista and it seems from the limited info at hand that with a large widescreen you can basically operate nearly the same as dual monitor? If dual monitor is the way, then i suppose two 17" screen would do the trick. Space wise i like the idea to have one big widescreen. The issue is i have never tried dual before
Dual screen is very nice indeed. Used it for a little while and when I switched over to my onboard 6100 I couldn't use it anymore. I was so dissapointed and found it really hard to work with so little space. I haven't used widescreen before but I would definately give dual screen try to see if you like it!