Im looking to buy an LCD monitor for a limited budget and stumbled with this one:
Its Viewsonic VA712 17" LCD monitor with 8ms response time. Is 8ms a tolerable amount in eliminating or somehow, reducing ghosting effects? And also I have a video card which is Inno3d GeForce FX5200, will it be compatible?
Inno3D GeForce FX5200 Specifications
• Powered by NVidia GeForce FX 5200 GPU
• Available in 64/128 meg versions
• CineFX™ engine
• 128-bit studio-precision color
• Architected for Cg
• AGP 8X -2.1GB/s bandwidth to system
• Core Clock: 250MHz
• Memory Clock: 400MHz
• Memory Bandwidth: 6.4GB per second
• Fill Rate: 1.0 Billion texels per second
• Verticals per second: 63 million
• Operations per second: 1.03 trillion
• 0.15 Micron Process Technology
• NVIDIA®'s nView™ multi-display technology
• Digital Vibrance Control (DVC) 3.0
• 350MHz RAMDACs support 2048x1536 resolution at 75MHz
• 4 Pixels/Clock Rendering Pipeline
• Pixel Shader and Vertex Shader 2.0
• New 64-phase Video Scaler
• Highest DVI output up to 1600x1200
• Integrated TV encoder up to 1024x768 resolution
• Integrated full hardware MPEG-2 decoder
• NVidia® Unified Driver Architecture (UDA)
• Microsoft® DirectX® 9.0 Optimizations and Support
• OpenGL® 1.4 Optimizations and Support
What do you call on the port for the LCD monitor that should I look in my video card?
Very much thanks.
Its Viewsonic VA712 17" LCD monitor with 8ms response time. Is 8ms a tolerable amount in eliminating or somehow, reducing ghosting effects? And also I have a video card which is Inno3d GeForce FX5200, will it be compatible?
Inno3D GeForce FX5200 Specifications
• Powered by NVidia GeForce FX 5200 GPU
• Available in 64/128 meg versions
• CineFX™ engine
• 128-bit studio-precision color
• Architected for Cg
• AGP 8X -2.1GB/s bandwidth to system
• Core Clock: 250MHz
• Memory Clock: 400MHz
• Memory Bandwidth: 6.4GB per second
• Fill Rate: 1.0 Billion texels per second
• Verticals per second: 63 million
• Operations per second: 1.03 trillion
• 0.15 Micron Process Technology
• NVIDIA®'s nView™ multi-display technology
• Digital Vibrance Control (DVC) 3.0
• 350MHz RAMDACs support 2048x1536 resolution at 75MHz
• 4 Pixels/Clock Rendering Pipeline
• Pixel Shader and Vertex Shader 2.0
• New 64-phase Video Scaler
• Highest DVI output up to 1600x1200
• Integrated TV encoder up to 1024x768 resolution
• Integrated full hardware MPEG-2 decoder
• NVidia® Unified Driver Architecture (UDA)
• Microsoft® DirectX® 9.0 Optimizations and Support
• OpenGL® 1.4 Optimizations and Support
What do you call on the port for the LCD monitor that should I look in my video card?
Very much thanks.