HAHJA. Monitor.
Monitor
Which type of monitor? Which type of monitor?
A VGA or DVI port provides video only display.
Lan Card provides a port for a network cable to connect the pc to a network.. LAN : Local area network or Ethernet Card and Network Card
AGP (Accelerated Graphics Port) is a computer bus designed for video cards. It is faster than PCI, but has been supplanted by PCI-E.AGP, or Advanced Graphics Port allows the use of a high speed graphics card which can considerably improve performance of the computer video. The AGP slot only provides the possibility of improved graphics, next you need to get a high quality AGP CARD.
No, you should use a bus to connect a capture card to a computer. If you're asking if you should use the S-video port to connect the video device playing the video you want to capture to the card... sure, it's one option, and if your capture card and video device support S-video, it's likely to result in a higher-quality image than using the composite video port will.
It depends on which ports you have. If you have PC then you can connect your video card in ISA (really old port),PCI or PCI-E ports. If you you have a laptop, you can use PCMCI port to connect a video card. You video card should have according specifications for PCI-E it should be PCI-E compatible.
AGP stands for Accelerated Graphics Port. This type of graphics card provides a dedicated way for your computer to communicate with your graphics card.
It is exactly different because one is bus and one is port. Video port is used to connect to monitor or LCD, but video bus refers to the bus on video card that works to transfer data. The same as motherboard, It has bus on itself to transfer data among connected devices.
provides an interface between a computer and a display monitor
NIC (Network Interface Card)
Most likely you have conflict of IRQs, try to install the network card in another port. Or try to switch places for your video card and the network adapter.
A monitor is a device that displays video signals. The signals themselves are calculated through discrete hardware (graphical processing units or video cards) or are integral to the CPU themselves.