Wednesday, October 15th 2008

Sparkle Presents GeForce 8400 GS PCI Express x1

SPARKLE Computer Co., Ltd., the professional VGA card manufacturer and supplier, today presents the SPARKLE GeForce 8400 GS PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards, the first PCI Express x1 solution on SPARKLE family product. SPARKLE GeForce 8400 GS PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards create upgrade possibility on your generic PC, bringing advanced SM 4.0 and 2nd PureVideo HD technology, promising the best HDTV video, the best office and the best multimedia experience to non-mainstream users.
PCI Express x1 Bus Type
SPARKLE GeForce 8400 GS PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards benefit on the latest PCI Express technology. With PCI Express x1 bus type, they can be added on the motherboard which have at least one PCI Express x1 slot as the second graphics card, providing multiple monitors supports for heavy computer users and certain industries. SPARKLE GeForce 8400 GS PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards are also suitable for HTPC or IPC which doesn't come with much expansion ability and no PCI Express x16 slot, they help HTPC to smoothly playback 720p and 1080p HD videos with 2nd PureVideo technology from NVIDIA. SPARKLE GeForce 8400 GS PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards are the best choices for budget gamers who want more 3D powerful weapons to replace onboard graphics but with only PCI Express x1 slot onboard.

2nd Generation PureVideo HD
High-definition video decoder and post-processor delivers unprecedented picture clarity, smooth video and accurate color for movies and video.

Cooling System
Exquisitely made cooling fans or passive cooling sink, which have high performance thermal compound ensures optimal thermal dissipation even after years of use.
Source: Sparkle
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26 Comments on Sparkle Presents GeForce 8400 GS PCI Express x1

#26
Mussels
Freshwater Moderator
swaayeThe more important question to ask is : When will PhysX matter? It does not right now and I hope it never does. The gamer populace should never work in favor of a proprietary API. Of course, D3D is proprietary but wtf can we do about that really when the people who run the alternatives don't really care that much about games anyway.
Physics (not Physx) is going to become a big part of directX 11.

Whether or not we'll need to find small DX11 cards or current CUDA based cards will suffice to power that, i do not know.
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