You can use any AGP card as long as the motherboard has a compatible slot. Check out specs like AGP4x 8x etc..
- Neeraj Sharma
More details would be required to answer this I'm afraid. Ie the model number of the motherboard. From here, we can be of more use to you.
You can use AGP graphics card with any type of memory DDR. DDR2, DDR3. Graphics card memory type does not have any relation with memory type used on your PC's motherboard. - Neeraj Sharma I believe this answer is incorrect. I have found that some motherboards have onboard graphics which are connected to the pci slots. This creates a connection with a PCI graphics card, and the differences in RAM type will indeed cause problems for the driver and the OS. Bill Newman
Any 4x or 8x AGP card.
Yes.
Every PC has to have either graphics embedded into the motherboard or either a a dedicated graphics card that fits into an expansion slot on the motherboard. You can buy a motherboard without graphics, but you would need to supply a graphics card to go with it.
Video Cards that work with that motherboard are either AGP 4x or AGP 8x. See here for manufacturer info: http://www.asus.com/products.aspx?l1=3&l2=13&l3=56&model=217&modelmenu=1
You can use a 8x AGP card but the motherboard will throttle it down to 4x, so you lose any performance gain you would get with a AGP 8x motherboard. 8x cards are cheap, and 4x cards are hard to find, so it's not going to hurt anything to buy something more powerful than what your motherboard will run it at. Pricewise, an 8x card goes from $15 to $50 for low-end graphics.
Any AGP graphics card (such as an NVIDIA GeForce 7600GS or an ATI Radeon HD 4760) will work. Depending on the power requirements of the card, you may need to upgrade your power supply.
Because it most likely is. AGP, stands for Accelerated Graphics Processor (loosely) If you can put a modem in that slot it would most likely be PCI. The card must be PCI. AGP and PCI cards are physically different. The connections to the motherboard are not identical or interchangeable. The PCI card is located more to the back of the case or board, while the AGP card slots are away from the edge and noticeably more towards the center of the motherboard. --- This is a common issue for AGP graphics cards if you are using an ATI chipset (for example: Radeon), or an ASUS chipset (for example: x800). Though I have not yet found the solution for this error, it does not seem to cause any major issues for Windows XP systems, so long as you maintain your Windows Updates. It is also common for ATI / ASUS AGP graphics cards to report "echoes" - a PCI card that is "also installed" from your AGP socket. If this is the case, there may be issues with your motherboard or BIOS reporting incorrectly. Seek your computer manufacturer for technical assistance if this is the case.
An integrated video card is located on the motherboard itself and cannot be replaced. You can add a graphics card to one of the motherboard's slots though. It will then take over and the onboard graphics will not be used. To avoid any conflicts, you should disable the onboard graphics when adding a dedicated graphics card.
You can upgrade an AGP video card to any other AGP video card.
If you have an onboard graphics card it wont have it..so you find it on normal graphics card that are not on the motherboard..any graphics card can support vertex shader so buy one