cause the video card is a bit too old...
every deltachrome or unichrome IGP chipset doesnt support it...
The only way you coeld play CoD 2 is to buy a newer video card and ask the guy in the shop[ that the video card SUPPORTS alpha blending to make sure...
I had the same problem and it's working good.
Goodluck,
No. It is a graphics card chipset.
It has a motherboard-integrated graphics chipset by Intel: Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 4500MHD
No, they are not the same thing.
The competitors for the Intel GMA 950 graphics chipset are Nvidia and ATi Integrated onboard graphics chips and the Intel HD 4000 and X4500. Desktop cards do not compete with integrated.
It appears that its sporting the Nvidia ION GPU Chipset. :)
Strictly speaking, neither. It is an integrated graphics chipset. The chipset is mapped to the AGP bus, but is inferior to almost every actual AGP card in existence. it is disabled when an AGP card is installed.
There's really not that much you can do. This laptop comes with a VERY poor quality graphics chipset.
Mobile Intel(R) 4 Series Express Chipset Family.
igfxtray.exe beglongs Intel(R) Graphics Accelerator Helper. And it is a process which allows you to access the Intel Graphics configuration and diagnostic application for the Intel 810 series graphics chipset.
I believe that you are referring to the Intel chipset that is in your computer. This is a collection of electronics that controls input and output of the computer. Lookup the Intel site on the Internet, go to their support section, and check for the chipset that you have. You might be able to download updates, software to speed up your computer, or graphics programs which will allow you to have much better graphics.
Radeon HD 6530d is the better one of the two. it is always better to have a independent video card then the onboard video chipset, because the onboard chipset uses the ram from the motherboard and a independent video card has its own ram to use and never uses the systems ram. so all in all, your computer will run games better with a independent video card then a onboard chipset.
Technically yes, although the performance is quite bad.