According to the nVidia website, yes it does:
http://www.nvidia.com/object/geforce6_techspecs.html
Minimum = Nvidia gefore 6600 series
6600
6600
Percentage loss is 30%.
The Americans won, and by a ton. The British started off at 6600 soldiers, and by the end 300 had died, 370 were wounded, and 5900 were captured. The Americans, on the other hand, started off at 6600 soldiers, 30 died, 100 were wounded and none were captured.
The front end estimate is 7000. But estimating a single number, in isolation and without context, is a complete waste of time. It all comes down to the context of what needs to be done with the number.If I had to add 6560 to 1 trillion, I would estimate it as 0.If I had to add 6560 to 0.0000000001, I would use the number as given, or possibly the front end estimate. If I had to divide it by 30, I would estimate it as 6570, because 6570/30 = 219. If I had to divide it by 11, I would estimate it as 6600, because 6600/11 = 600.
Factors of 6600 are: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 11, 12, 15, 20, 22, 24, 25, 30, 33, 40, 44, 50, 55, 60, 66, 75, 88, 100, 110, 120, 132, 150, 165, 200, 220, 264, 275, 300, 330, 440, 550, 600, 660, 825, 1100, 1320, 1650, 2200, 3300 and 6600.
Nvideo Geforce GT 520 you can get it for about 50 Dollars
To figure out how long a revolution is you need to find the circumference of the wheel. If the diameter is 70 centimeters, then to get the circumference you multiply the diameter by pi (3.14). That equals 219.8. centimeters. Then you convert 66 meters into centimeters, and that is 6600. Then you divide 6600 by 219.8 and get 30 revolutions.
It will surely play it VERY well!!! I am running a old iMac with the 8400m card and it plays it at roughly 30-40fps. Which is pretty darn good!
No.
To support an object with a mass of 5 kg, you need to support it with a force equal to its weight. 30 N won't be enough in this case.