it depends on how old, be more specific next time
An AGP card functions as the computer's graphics processor.
The Motherboard i think or maybe the processor.
Graphics card, hands down
That processor may just handle it but it also depends on what graphics card you have in your computer. It will tell you whether it will play well on your computer.
Core clock is the actual speed at which the graphics processor on a video card on a computer operates. The core clock speed is measured in megahertz.
Update your graphics card and processor. Adding RAM also helps. It may be easier to buy a new computer with a high-end graphics card and processor. There are many that are prebuilt (like Alienware) but the cheaper option would be to individually order all the parts (motherboard, processor, graphics card, RAM, etc.) and put it together by yourself.
Intel's new Core i3, i5, and i7 processors combine a graphics processor with the computer's main processor chip. This results in better video performance without an additional graphics card.
hi 1st is the motherboard, 2nd possessor, 3rd ram, 4th graphics card,
The power supply is what provides power for everything in your computer (processor, disk drives, hard drives, fans, etc.). If your power supply fails your computer can't turn on at all (no activity). The VGA card is your graphics card. If the VGA card fails your computer will still turn on but you won't see anything on your monitor (no graphics). The processor fan is the fan that sits on top and cools your main processor. If your processor fan fails and the computer continues to stay on it's likely that you processor will overheat and be ruined. If your main processor is fried your computer will turn on but windows will not boot up and you may see an error message on the screen.
Generally, no. The computer's speed is usually limited by other components (such as the processor, RAM, Graphics Card, etc.)
Depending on the graphics card in your computer it will state the graphics you have
printer