yep
You will still be able to use the on-board VGA but your new graphics card (depending on which one) will be better so you can use the ports on the graphics cards instead.
A graphics card is not a acronym therefore it does not particularly stand for anything. A graphics card or video card is the electronic board or unit that produces the graphics and video images that are to be displayed on a monitor/tv screen.
This is a misnomer, for a built in or on board Graphics's Card. This is where Graphics's Card is built into the Main or Motherboard as a Graphics's controller chip and sharing the on board RAM. These are for entry level systems or Servers. If you want proper performance get a good Graphics's Card, you won't be glad you did until you see someone's system with out one.
No both graphics card must be the same.
On board video, or better known/told as integrated graphics, is a 'graphics card' found in a CPU. Most Intel CPUs have integrated graphics in them. It just means a graphics card is not required, and video devices (such as a monitor) are plugged into the video ports of a motherboard.
A graphics card is not a acronym therefore it does not particularly stand for anything. A graphics card or video card is the electronic board or unit that produces the graphics and video images that are to be displayed on a monitor/tv screen.
Yes, that is determined by the ports on your motherboard. Once you have a card that will work then you will go into the BIOS and disable the on-board graphics
Counter strike source is a small game, even my on-board laptop graphics card work with it and its 780MB
All the computers pass signals to the monitors through a graphics card. And its your graphics card that controls the signals to the monitor. A graphics card may be integrated or installed in a VGA, PCI or ISA slot of the main board of your computer.
A graphics card
No, the graphics chipset on nearly all laptops is on the motherborad and laptops do not not have expansion slots. Desktops often have "on-board" graphis as well, but they have expansion slots so you can disable the on-board graphics and add a video card to one of the expansion slots to upgrade the graphics.
Yes they both are similar