Re: Should I change my graphic card? 2005-05-19 - By T.Hopkins7@(protected)
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I know you are absolutely right. I need to use my old computer here for all my word processing and writing tools and buy a new computer for my 3D software. I have alot of 3D programs now that I am trying to learn that I bought from Academic Superstore. I have Carrara 4 Pro, Lightwave 8, Softimage XSI, Poser 5 , Maya Unlimited and my only full licensed program- Vue 5 Infinite and I am surprised my old, little computer has not blown up despite having 786 MB of Ram , adding a hard drive, and a graphic card. I don't believe I can even upgrade anymore. I hate reinstalling the programs with the dongles -they are a pain. I think I reach the max that my computer will let me. I need to start saving for a new computer and a new car. Tina -- ---- ------ Original message -- ---- ------ Dear Tina and everyone else considering upgrades for their graphics cards,
modern pc computers have endless combination of components, operating system versions and patches, drivers etc. It is next to impossible to get a 3d card that solves all your problems.
There are certified setups available from IBM, HP etc, but the certification is valid if you use the driver versions they provide and the programs they certify for (maya, xsi, 3ds max and avid video editing applications and lots of CAD programs). If you install a new dirextX version from windows update to get a quak XYZ game/ messenger/ office application /whatever to work, you'll loose the certified qualification and free support. Those setups are for serious business only. You basically do only one thing with those workstation - 3D. No word, no e-mail. I know for a fact, that many companies have nothing else installed there. Users have other computers for daily office tasks.
I used to have such a workstation, installing microsoft office caused it to crash as it updated some .dll that was used for windows user interface components or something.... The workstation had to be reverted back to factory settings ( format c: etc...)
Getting a new and faster graphics card can actually cause you more troubles. They draw a lot of current (especially some nvidia models) and if your power supply isn't really strong, the motherboard can't supply enough current for memory, processing unit and graphics card simultaneously and your computer will malfunction. When you are upgrading old computer, you'll have to remember that some parts of it may not live up to standards of today.
If you can afford, get a brand new computer. Install what you need, one program at a time. Make restoration points after each install. Test with large and demanding tasks. �nstall next application etc. After everything works make a restoration point. Make a backup. Never install anything if it works. If new graphics driver promises to fix something in game xyz or to improve speed by 20%, don't install it. It uses some hack to improve speed and causes you nothing but trouble. If it tells that it fixes problems with carrara studio version that you are using, don't install it unless you are having problems described.
USe your old computer for e-mail and dull stuff like office applications. Play games with that computer and never install any games or funny or cute lite apps on the WORKstation. By skipping a few fps of speed in newer driver, you'll propably get much more stable environment.
petteri
ps. if getting a new pc computer, get an athlon 64x2 dual-core processor. Dual core pentiums suffer from shared memory bandwidth problems due to architectural differences.
--- In Carrara@(protected), T.Hopkins7@(protected) wrote: > My video card s--ks. I would like to have a list of cards that are not only compatible with windows xp pro sp2 but also with all my 3D art and design programs. I think you have to spend at least 300 to get a good card and I have never done that yet. What video cards do you (all Carrar users on this site) have? I don't even think the Nvidia GeForce FX 5200 is even Open GL, but of course I could be wrong. Tina > > -- ---- ------ Original message -- ---- ------ > How much does your card have memory? memory is divided between > geometry and textures. Sudden slow down may indicate that your > graphics card run out of buffer memory. Hide things you don't need > to see all the time by using visible in 3d -property and see if it > helps. > > Other than that, get more memory. Go for 2gb if you can afford. > > petteri > > --- In Carrara@(protected), "Cahyono F." <ml@(protected)> wrote: > > Hi all, > > > > I'm working on a big scene with Carrara 4 Pro. At around 150 > objects and about 700.000 facets (from Edit > Counter) Carrara still > run smoothly. But now I've hit 240 objects and more than a million > facets it becomes very slow in Assemble Room (OpenGL, Flat rendering > mode), other rooms or if I view certain grouped objects only are > still acceptably fast. My system is AMD Barton 2600+, 512MB Ram, and > GeForce FX5200. Where's the bottleneck? My CPU, my graphic card or > Carrara itself? > > > > Thanks, > > Cahyono > > > > > Welcome Yahoo Members! > > http://www.eovia.com > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > To visit your group on the web, go to: > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Carrara/ > > To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: > Carrara-unsubscribe@(protected) > > Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service. > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Welcome Yahoo Members!
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To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: Carrara-unsubscribe@(protected)
Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Welcome Yahoo Members!
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