Difference between revisions of "Talk:Choosing a computer"

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(→‎Graphics Hardware: new section)
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[[User:WolfBaginski Bearsfoot|WolfBaginski Bearsfoot]] 07:44, 25 July 2010 (UTC)
[[User:WolfBaginski Bearsfoot|WolfBaginski Bearsfoot]] 07:44, 25 July 2010 (UTC)
: For an enjoyable experience, I holistically agree about skipping integrated (usually Intel) graphics and opting for a dedicated graphics card. I see a lot of GPUs that cost US$25-50 and more than exceed our System Recommendations — it's a worthwhile investment. {{TorSig}} <font size="1">on 2010-07-26 @ 1:11 PM Pacific</font>

Revision as of 13:13, 26 July 2010

Share your experiences with various system configs here! - Torley-favicon.png on 2010-07-19 @ 9:58 AM Pacific

Graphics Hardware

The usual recommendation is to use nVidia hardware for the best OpenGL support. This is a combination of the actual OpenGL functions, and the utilities to adjust the display. The DirectX labelling is mostly a guide to the available GPU power for the purposes of OpenGL use.

Many motherboards have built-in graphics hardware, which is, frankly, barely adequate. If your cash-flow is a problem, it's good enough to run SL, and you can add a graphics card later. Don't expect to get a high frame rate. The Viewer 2.x family seem to be setting graphics to get a higher frame rate, and if you're following this approach, you could find detail settings are low enough to be ugly--circles appearing as hexagons--and trading frame rate for a slightly higher detail setting may be worth it.

WolfBaginski Bearsfoot 07:44, 25 July 2010 (UTC)

For an enjoyable experience, I holistically agree about skipping integrated (usually Intel) graphics and opting for a dedicated graphics card. I see a lot of GPUs that cost US$25-50 and more than exceed our System Recommendations — it's a worthwhile investment. - Torley-favicon.png on 2010-07-26 @ 1:11 PM Pacific