The Quadro FX 1100 was a professional graphics card by NVIDIA, launched on April 1st, 2004. Built on the 130 nm process, and based on the NV36B graphics processor, in its FX 1100 variant, the card supports DirectX 9.0a. Since Quadro FX 1100 does not support DirectX 11 or DirectX 12, it might not be able to run all the latest games. The NV36B graphics processor is an average sized chip with a die area of 133 mm² and 82 million transistors. It features 4 pixel shaders and 3 vertex shaders, 4 texture mapping units, and 4 ROPs. Due to the lack of unified shaders you will not be able to run recent games at all (which require unified shader/DX10+ support). NVIDIA has paired 128 MB DDR2 memory with the Quadro FX 1100, which are connected using a 128-bit memory interface. The GPU is operating at a frequency of 425 MHz, memory is running at 325 MHz. Being a single-slot card, the NVIDIA Quadro FX 1100 draws power from 1x Molex power connector, with power draw not exactly known. Display outputs include: 2x DVI, 1x S-Video. Quadro FX 1100 is connected to the rest of the system using an AGP 8x interface. The card measures 241 mm in length, 111 mm in width, and features a single-slot cooling solution.