Yes, it does. Actually at this point number of processor can go over 1 thousand (depending on nature of processors). And, yes it does have own memory. Latest video cards can have as much as 4 GB.
Well the driver will take up very little hard drive space depending on the video card. Now all video cards have built in memory (RAM) but after the ammount that is on the video card runs out. It will start using the RAM on your computer. Just depends on the game you are trying to run. Also your Proccessor, RAM and Video Card all work together for running games. Hope this helped :)
Video cards have their own memory. Adding RAM to the machine will help graphics performance, but not as much as a card with more on-board memory.
You most likely have an integrated video card. Integrated video cards do not have their own memory, and use system memory (RAM) for video. Your video card is using 32MB of your ram. On most computers you can change the amount available to video by logging into bios and changing video memory amount.
That depends on what kind of video card you have. If you have an integrated video card (most likely) you may be able to allocate some more shared memory to the video by simply adjusting a setting in the BIOS. You can find out how to do that in the system manual. However, many BIOS config program will not allow you to allocate more than a certain percentage of system memory, so increasing your total system memory might allow you to set a higher percentage of shared memory to the video adapter. However, if you have a dedicated video card, it would have it's own memory built into it, and therefore you wouldn't be able to increase it, short of replacing that video adapter entirely with one that has more memory already on it. Check your system specs with the manufacture and see which you have, and proceed from there.
GPU memory is independent of the motherboard that runs its own memory. You can have only one type of memory on a motherboard, ie. DDR3, and have a graphics card with built in DDR5 memory. Short answer is yes, they are independent of each other.
A video card does indeed have its own memory and processor. The memory or RAM is specifically designed to store and quickly access the data required to display high-quality graphics. The processor or GPU is responsible for all of the complex calculations and operations required to generate the graphics on the screen. The RAM on a video card is usually GDDR SDRAM. The GPU on a video card is usually a dedicated graphics processor. The memory and processor on a video card are specialized for graphics processing.Having its own dedicated memory and processor enable a video card to quickly and efficiently process graphics allowing for smooth and detailed visuals. Without these components the graphics on the screen would be less detailed and more choppy.
A video card can be added, but the memory can't be expanded enough to create a decent gaming computer. I personally own a HP ZE4500 and you can bring total memory up to 2gb of ram, with 2x1gb sticks, I've done it with mine and it works. Also with the video card upgrade it plays quite alot of mid-range games perfectly fine!
On board video uses system memory while add in cards carry their own memory. An add in card frees up system resources.
In technology, GPU (short for graphics processing unit, also known as graphics card or video card) is a component inside a computer, much like a computer itself. It has it's own random access memory (or uses some of the computer's own memory on some cards, commonly integrated video cards) and a processor. It processes all on-screen items, and a good video card is a vital component when gaming, due to newer standards like OpenGL, OpenCL, etc in which the video card's is what processes the contents of applications.
video adapter or graphics card. As most of the graphics card have its own bios available
You can use NoteBurner YouTube Video Downloader, a handy tool that helps you save youtube videos in MP4 or MKV format. After the video has been saved in MP4/MKV format, you can transfer it to your memory card.
If you don't have a memory card, you've got nothing to save the downloads onto. The PSP's own internal memory is only for system settings, and its own firmware.