Pixel shader 3.0 (and other variants) are hard-coded into the video card and its drivers. If you have a very fast processor and a good amount of ram, you may be able to get around the pixel shader requirement by downloading Swiftshader, which implements Shader Model 3.0 level capabilities on the CPU.
More likely, the best option is for you to simply replace your video card with one which has native support for pixel shader. Video cards with pixel shader 3.0 are very common these days, it is not an expensive upgrade & will improve performance on other programs as well.
Pixel shader technology is hard-coded into your video card and its drivers. If your video card does not have the pixel shader technology required, your best option is to replace your video card with one which has native support for the pixel shader version needed.
It can however also be supported in software, for example using SwiftShader. Although it's generally slower than dedicated hardware support, it works well for games that are not too demanding.
You could also try a tool called 3D-Analyze. It tricks games into thinking your hardware has different features than what it really supports. It can be hard to find the right settings thoughs, or may not work at all.
thank you
exelent
You cannot download Pixel Shader because your graphics card should already have and support it. If not, you will need a new graphics card which supports it.
you cant you will have to buy a new graphics card that supports pixel shader 2.0,3.0
Minimum = Nvidia gefore 6600 series
I believe you need a Video card that will support pixel shader 2.0.
Pixel shader technology is hard-coded into the video card and its drivers. If you have a very fast processor and a good amount of ram, you may be able to get around the pixel shader requirement by downloading "3DAnalyze" or "Swiftshader 2.0" to emulate pixel shader. More likely, the best option is for you to simply replace your video card with one which has native support for pixel shader. Video cards with pixel shader 3.0 are very common these days, it is not an expensive upgrade & will improve performance on other programs as well.
Pixel Shader 2.0
No, the Pixel Shader version describes the capability of your hardware. If you're getting that error from a game you will probably need to upgrade your video card. There is a way though to use software emulation but its best if you have the actual hardware that uses pixel shader.
GeForce MX does not support vertex shader and pixel shader.
The Geforce FX 5200 has pixel shader 2.0 which is backward-compatible with pixel shader 1.1 So, yes, the FX5200 has pixel shader 1.1.
Pixel shader 1.3 (and other variants) are hard-coded into the video card and its drivers. If you have a very fast processor and a good amount of ram, you may be able to get around the pixel shader requirement by downloading "3DAnalyze" or "Swiftshader 2.0" to emulate pixel shader. More likely, the best option is for you to simply replace your video card with one which has native support for pixel shader. Video cards with pixel shader 2.0 and 3.0 are very common these days, it is not an expensive upgrade & will improve performance on other programs as well.