Right click your desktop and click properties in the drop down menu. Click the settings tab at the top of the window that popped up. Then, click the advanced button in the bottom left of the window. In another window that pops up, click the adapter tab at the top. Down by ADAPTER INFORMATION, it will list the name of your graphics chip, the DAC type (internal or external), and the memory size. This is your Video Ram MB size that you are looking for.
On a Windows platform: Click the "START" button and the click "RUN..." next you type "dxdiag" (without quotes) and click the "display" tab. In the box that says "device" is all your chipset information.
The computer can be used to find the MB of the graphics card. The graphic card is usually mounted on the graphics card reader. The MB of the graphic card can be read by looking at the drive of the graphics card.
I have a DV520 Camcorder, It will only video for 2 minutes.
A 2 MB video card that supported DirectX 7 rendering and an 800x600 display resolution. This should easily be supplied by virtually any video card you'll ever encounter today.
If you're lucky you may get 30 seconds out of it. If you do not have at least a 2 gb card you should not rely on it to shoot any video at all.
The Sapphire Radeon HD 3850 512 MB AGP 8x Graphics Card is a top rated card choice.
The HD Radeon 3850 Ice Q 512 mb.
most likely, yes
I bought one at circuit city for around $25.00, this was a xd card
at least 256 MB or higher...--> Ral2
1 GB of RAM and a video card or on-board video that supports the DirectX 9 graphics standard and has at least 128 MB of graphics memory.
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.
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