NO. If you have a pci-x slot, probably it is a server, and you want to upgrade your graphics card, you can buy a PCI card and plug it into your PCI-X slot. It should work probably.
An AGP slot is a post-PCI/pre-PCIx graphic card interface bus. It was a step up from the PCI video cards, but were phased out with the PCIx standard.
The HP a1230n does not have a dedicated graphics card slot. It has three PCI slots and one PCI Express slot. Any of these could be used for a graphics card (the PCI Express is the best option) or other peripherals.
A processor of a computer does not interfere or limit to which kind of graphics card you can add. To find out which kinds of graphics card you can add, you need to open up your computer and find a x16 pci express slot. To find the slot you have to look around your motherboard to find a spot where it says x16 pc-express slot. If you have this slot, you should be able to add a graphics card. P.S. There are other factors to consider when adding a graphics card. For more information read below (related links).
The Intel DG33BU motherboard does not have a dedicated PCI Express slot for a video card. Instead, it features integrated graphics support through its Intel GMA 3100 graphics. However, it does have a PCI Express x16 slot, which can be used for graphics cards, provided that the system's BIOS supports it and there are no hardware limitations.
It's a graphics card slot for the AGP graphics cards (the card with the ports you plug the monitor into), and like PCI and PCI-X, was superceded by PCI-Express around 2004. Hope this helps! SeanHolshouser
GDDR3 is referring to the type of VRAM the graphics card has. If the graphics card is a pci-express one, then it can be installed into the motherboard if it has a pci-express slot available. DDR3 is referring to the type of Memory/RAM
The AGP slot was primarily used for graphics cards. These have been phased out by PCI Express slots.
A PCIe x16 graphics card will not work in a normal PCI slot. PCIe or PCI Express is a new standard in expansion interfaces. PCIe is physically and electronically incompatible with PCI slots.
The eVGA nVidia GeForce 9500 GT PCI-Express 2.0 Graphics Card needs a PCI-Express card slot and more powerful power supply. It also runs much faster, can be used for SLI, and has two DVI outputs. The eVGA e-GeForce 6200 256MB AGP Graphics Card requires an AGP8x card slot and is not nearly as powerful as the 9500 GT.
No.
A graphics card typically plugs into a motherboard via a PCI Express (PCIe) slot. This connection allows the graphics card to communicate with the CPU and other components, enabling it to process and render graphics efficiently. Additionally, the graphics card may connect to a power supply unit (PSU) for additional power, depending on its specifications.
Take a look at your system motherboard to see if it has an AGP or PCI Express card slot (it will be the topmost expansion slot on the motherboard--your monitor should be connected to the card currently sitting there). This will tell you which type of video card is available to you.