The nvidia geforce FX series and 6000 series & up all have support for at least 2.0.
this is true but not for all geforce series. you would have to have a 2000 to 3000 power on your nvidia grapghic card.
nvidia's chipset only support pixel shaders since the GeForce 3 models, so no GeForce 2 does not support pixel shaders neither vertex shaders.
No. The geforce MX series does not have pixel shader technology.
No, the GeForce 2 does not have pixel shader technology. You will need to upgrade your video card in order to get pixel shader 2.
The Geforce FX 5200 has pixel shader 2.0 which is backward-compatible with pixel shader 1.1 So, yes, the FX5200 has pixel shader 1.1.
No, it doesnt
GeForce MX does not support vertex shader and pixel shader.
No Geforce 4's only support Pixel Shader 1.3 You need at least a Geforce FX 5 Series to use Pixel Shader 2.0
The GeForce 7000 series all have support for pixel shader 3.0 and under. So your answer is yes.
The GeForce 9000 series all has support for pixel shader 4.0 and under. So your answer is yes.
The geforce 8000 series all support pixel shader 4.0 and under. So your answer is yes.
The GeForce 6000 series all have support for pixel shader 3.0 and under. So your answer is yes.
No this only supports Pixel Shader 3.0
Yes, the go 7300 has pixel shader 3.0 support.
shader 1.1
Pixel shader is a technology included in many video cards which allows programs to render more realistic lighting in 3d visualizations. Many modern PC games require a certain amount of pixel-shader code within the video card. If you have such a game and it will not run due to a lack of a pixel shader, you will need to buy a new video card in order to play that game. In some circumstances, merely updating the drivers will suffice. However, it is much more likely that you will need a new video card. The number that follows pixel shading isn't a size, it is a version. Every version is backwards-compatible with all the previous versions, so the higher the better. Basically it breaks down like this. Pixel shader 1.1 = Supported by Geforce 3 and higher Pixel shader 1.3 = Geforce 4 and higher Pixel shader 1.4 = Radeon R200 & up Pixel shader 2.0 = Radeon R300 & up Pixel shader 2.0b = Radeon R420 and Geforce FX and up Pixel shader 3.0 = Radeon R520, Geforce 6 and 7 series Pixel shader 4.0 = Radeon R600, Geforce 8 and 9 series So if you had a geforce 7 series, you would be able to run any game which required pixel shader 1.1 thru 3.0 but not a game which required 4.0 Most of the modern games out there right now are requiring 3.0 at the most, it is not difficult to find a video card which has this for under $100.