Possibly overheating? Check all your computer's fans are working correctly and use HWmonitor (http://www.cpuid.com/hwmonitor.php) to check the temperature.
it is posible
4 million minutes
I have a DV520 Camcorder, It will only video for 2 minutes.
If the video card(s) in question has/have a power slot on them (might be a 4 or 6 pin slot) they MUST have power. Reason being, the power going to the video card power key components for the video card which without, will not work at all.
Yes, the video card is NOT integrated into the mainboard on the Dell Inspiron e1705. But replacement cards ain't cheap.
its possible that your game is not good enought for the video games or you need to update your video card and install graphic card files like Direct X
because people eat bacon
System RAM and Video RAM are two separate technologies, and do not directly depend on each other. It is possible to run a video card with GDDR6 on a system with only DDR1 RAM installed, and just as possible to run a video card with GDDR1 on a system with DDR3 RAM installed. Having a high speed GDDR video card will improve rendering performance, while having high speed RAM will improve loading times.
Short answer - You don't. The memory on a video card is set and can only be changed by replacing the current card with a better one. Unfortunately, that also is not possible on laptops.
Yes, it is. Just make sure that your motherboard has a port that supports the video card you want to get.
A 2 GB memory card will hold 30 minutes of HD video or 50 minutes of standard quality video. The actual amount of record time varies greatly based on the camera and its recording method.
Some video cameras have a file size limit of 4GB. The answer will also depend on what type of video you are recording. Standard video (TV resolution) will require much less memory. The various HD video formats will require much more. Another wikianswer indicates that a 2GB card can hold two hours of video. But it gives no indication of the video format. Casio claims 9 minutes 11 seconds per GB for their Exilim Pro Ex F1. So an 8GB card could hold 73 minutes 28 seconds of HD video. But it would need to be split into two or more files.