Turn off the computer, open the panel, remove the screw, pull the card.
On the other hand, if you're wanting to "remove" a video card that's part of the motherboard you may need to install a video card into one of the slots, get it working then you can disable the onboard video adapter from the list of drivers in the hardware profile.
You can't unless you are willing to accurately melt the solder away from the contact points on the motherboard, this breaches your warranty so if you screw up you can't fix it. best to not bother to be honest.
Open up your PC and unscrew the screw on the ledge of the expansion slot. Then unhook any hooks that are hooking the card to the motherboard. You should then be able to pull the card out easily.
You uninstall unless it your video card
Configuring the BIOS for the video card being installed Physically installing the video card Installing drivers for the video card Remove old video card from your computer (if you use on-board skip this step) Attach the new video card to your computer. Start Computer using on-board video and install drivers. Attach monitor to new card, if it still doesn't work disable on-board video in your bios. If everything is installed properly and computer has significant power graphics card should work properly.
I assume the video is stored on an SD card. You simply remove the card and plug it into a card reader which connects to your PC. Really simple :-)
You can upgrade an AGP video card to any other AGP video card.
Nvivia video card.
AGP Video card AGP retention mechanism = AGP Video expansion card
It is made up of the video card and monitor.
An integrated video card is "integrated" into the motherboard. That means the motherboard has a video card built in. A "discrete" video card means that you have a separate video card, one that typically plugs in to one of the expansion slots.
You can change your video card by following these steps: choose a new video card that works with your computer. Then uninstall the old video card from you computer. Then take the new video card and stick it into your computer. Install the new drivers and you are done!
Video grabber card allows you to capture video signal in a high resolution.
A video card or video adapter translates binary data into images.
A video card is just another name for a graphics card. They are one and the same.