SLI is new technology that allows you to scale graphics performance.
NO Crossfire and SLI must both be the same graphic card
SLI is not in the graphics card SLI is running two or more of the same graphics cards at the same time to increase the performance but you need a power supply and a motherboard that supports it
An SLI setup from nVidia -- this connects two graphics cards to greatly increase your system's graphic processing capability.
SLI is not in the graphics card SLI is running two or more of the same graphics cards at the same time to increase the performance but you need a power supply and a motherboard that supports it
NForce 590 sli motherboard will work with such card as far as it has an appropriate port (PCI-E).
A SLI video card is a video card that allows you to insert more than 2 graphics cards into your computer. It supports up to 4 of the same GPU's running at the same time. SLI was developed by 3DFX in 1997 for use with their graphics card the Voodoo2 but after the company was defuncted nVidia acquired the rights to use this technology. There is also CrossFireX which was developed by ATI.
SLI-ready means that you can run two of that same type of card together in one computer, giving you a performance boost, and spreading the load between the two cards.
To anyone that has read the original answer to this. NO you can not sli two different cards. Only amd crossfire can do that within families. Sli works in a way that it has to be the same exact card to work properly, that is why motherboards are harder to find for sli.
No. Just like on many other notebooks it is integrated. Only laptops with MXM and SLI type slots have replace/upgradable video cards.
Yes you can use an ati video card in a sli motherboard, however you cannot put two ati graphics cards in that motherboard and run them in sli. As far as putting one in and just running it single your ok. You would need a motherboard that supports Crossfire to run two ati graphics cards together.
SLI stands for Scalable Link Interface, and is an nVidia technology that allows two or more of the same graphics card to run in parallel, thus giving a performance increase.
Scalable Link Interface™