Jumat, 25 Juni 2010

Video card


A video card, video adapter, graphics-accelerator card, display adapter or graphics card is an expansion card whose function is to generate and output images to a display. Many video cards offer added functions, such as accelerated rendering of 3D scenes and 2D graphics, video capture, TV-tuner adapter, MPEG-2/MPEG-4 decoding, FireWire, light pen, TV output, or the ability to connect multiple monitors (multi-monitor). Other modern high performance video cards are used for more graphically demanding purposes, such as PC games.

Video hardware can be integrated on the motherboard, often occurring with early machines. In this configuration it is sometimes referred to as a video controller or graphics controller. Modern low-end to mid-range motherboards often include a graphics chipset developed by the developer of the northbridge (i.e. an nForce chipset with nVidia graphics or an Intel chipset with Intel graphics) on the motherboard. This graphics chip usually has a small quantity of embedded memory and takes some of the system's main RAM, reducing the total RAM available. This is usually called integrated graphics or on-board graphics, and is low-performance and undesirable for those wishing to run 3D applications. Almost all of these motherboards allow the disabling of the integrated graphics chip in BIOS, and have an AGP or PCI Express slot for adding a higher-performance graphics card in its stead.
Contents
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* 1 History
* 2 Components
o 2.1 Graphics processing unit (GPU)
o 2.2 Video BIOS
o 2.3 Video memory
o 2.4 RAMDAC
o 2.5 Outputs
+ 2.5.1 Video Graphics Array (VGA) (DE-15)
+ 2.5.2 Digital Visual Interface (DVI)
+ 2.5.3 Video In Video Out (VIVO) for S-Video, Composite video and Component video
+ 2.5.4 High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI)
+ 2.5.5 DisplayPort
+ 2.5.6 Other types of connection systems
o 2.6 Motherboard interface
o 2.7 Cooling devices
o 2.8 Power demand
* 3 See also
* 4 References
* 5 External links

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