- Joined
- Jan 1, 2015
- Messages
- 1,800 (0.50/day)
- Location
- EU
System Name | Adison "Open Space" 19 |
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Processor | Intel Pentium II, 350MHz |
Motherboard | Chaintech 6BTM, Slot 1 |
Cooling | SECC Cartridge |
Memory | 1x 64MB, PC100 |
Video Card(s) | ATI Rage IIc AGP, Diamond Monster 3DII 12MB |
Storage | BTC BCD-40XH, Quantum Fireball 3.5 Series, EX6.4 GB |
Display(s) | LG StudioWorks 57M |
Case | Adison Midi Tower, ATX |
Audio Device(s) | Creative SoundBlaster 128 |
Power Supply | Codegen 300W |
Mouse | Genius SlimStar 110, PS/2 |
Keyboard | Genius SlimStar 110, PS/2 |
Software | Microsoft Windows 98 |
No, unfortunately I do not have a separate, stand-alone 3400 card to match the onboard one. However, you gave me an idea ... it might be worth looking into finding one, to double up the original performance of a single 3400.Yes, I meant a 3400 series card that you could pair with the 3400 onboard. Too bad you don't have one, just for the experience of playing with hybrid xfire.
On a side note, I was just reading on nVidia's PhysX system and various situations where using two (or more) GPU units usually results with better performance, since one of the cards (presumably the faster one) gets to do 3D acceleration part, where the other one essentially becomes dedicated PhysX processing unit, offloading some of the work from the primary card.
To my surprise, the PhysX "SLI" seems to be working - nVidia control panel even automatically suggested & assigned the secondary card for PhysX application. No, it's not a real SLI but half way there, I guess.