Sadly you cannot. If yoou use it correctly, GLSL is so realistic that if you don't have a top notch graphics card, it wont even come close to working. Sorry i couldn't be of more help.
Graphics cards typically support DirectX 10, have a number of pixel and vector shaders and also support OpenGL.
Most modern laptop graphic cards support vertex shaders, including the onboard ones. An example is the Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 950 which supports vertex shader Model 3.0.
256 MB graphics card support pixel shader 3.0
No
Generally when comparing multiple video cards you want to look at memory, shaders, clock speeds, and recently CUDA cores. You also want to be aware if you have the power supply necessary to run the graphics card.
Most computers today include graphics cards. You may want to upgrade yours, depending on your needs, as there are different kinds of graphics cards, and not all support all applications.
Your motherboard must support SLI/CrossFire and you have to get same graphics cards,there are alot of youtube tutorials
The graphics card is the component used to display images to your monitor. It is used more than just for games. Without the graphics card, there is no output to your monitor. Back in the old days, we used to call these things "video cards", which made it more obvious as to what these things do.Now different graphics cards have different capabilities. Some graphics cards, as an example, cannot support games that uses DirectX8 and above. Some graphics cards support multiple monitors; others do not. Some graphics cards can do full-scene antialiasing; others do not. The capabilities of the different cards can vary; and how well they do it also varies.
The best graphics card to run in a PC will be based on what your motherboard is able to support and what type of connection it has. Normally, boards with PCI express are good cards. However, some of the best cards are Radeon cards or Invida cards, which are not cheap normally.
Yes, standard AGP graphics cards can support AMD64 processors, as the AGP interface is independent of the CPU architecture. The compatibility mainly depends on the motherboard's chipset and BIOS, which must support both AGP and AMD64 processors. As long as the motherboard has an AGP slot and is compatible with the AMD64 architecture, the graphics card should function properly.
It doesn't seem like that laptop's graphics are upgradeable. (Most laptops don't have upgradable graphics cards.)
Minimum = Nvidia gefore 6600 series