PCIe
PCIe
PCI or PCI Express
No, the graphics chipset on nearly all laptops is on the motherborad and laptops do not not have expansion slots. Desktops often have "on-board" graphis as well, but they have expansion slots so you can disable the on-board graphics and add a video card to one of the expansion slots to upgrade the graphics.
Video adapters, or graphics cards, convert digital data from a computer's CPU into visual signals that can be displayed on a monitor. They process graphical information using a dedicated GPU (Graphics Processing Unit), which handles rendering images, animations, and video. The adapter then sends these processed signals through various output ports (like HDMI or DisplayPort) to the display device. By offloading graphics processing from the CPU, video adapters improve overall system performance, especially in graphics-intensive tasks like gaming and video editing.
It would need to be reasonably powerful to develop and test games on and dual graphics adapters would probably be needed. You would definitely consider a desktop computer for this job though, not a laptop
go to Control Panel then Device Manager, then click on Display adapters.
Most experts agree that, although they are improving, on-board graphics adapters are actually inferior to stand alone video cards. This is because the on-board version uses too much memory and often cannot cope with the power needed for high end games and video editing.
The slot that does not typically support a display adapter is the PCI (Peripheral Component Interconnect) slot. While PCI slots can be used for various expansion cards, they are generally outdated for graphics purposes. Modern display adapters primarily utilize PCI Express (PCIe) slots, which provide higher bandwidth and better performance for graphics cards.
Hire ... Hire ... Hire.
Yes, you can http://www.amazon.com/Vtbook-PCMCIA-Typeii-Video-Adapters/dp/B000N2TDNA
In order to use the DVI ouput with The Thinkpad T400 or T500, you have to enable the "High Performace" graphics mode from the power manager.To switch graphics adapters, left-click on the ThinkVantage Power Manager battery icon in the system notification area. At the bottom of the pop-up menu there will be a Switchable Graphics sub-menu.http://www-307.ibm.com/pc/support/site.wss/document.do?sitestyle=lenovo&lndocid=MIGR-70495#g1
No.. AGP is the Graphics Port and PCI Express is Multi-Purpose..