InterviewSolution
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Solve : Is this computer okay for gaming?? |
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Answer» I recently bought this laptop but im not sure if its good enough for gaming. Can someone tell me how good mylaptop is capable of doing? The integrated Intel graphics will be capable of playing older games and maybe some less demanding newer games on low/medium settings. Without dedicated graphics, this isn't really intended as a gaming machine.Calum , I don't want to AGREE nor disagree. Consider this. Intel has put a lot of money and time into its new CPU design. The have the people and tools needed to make the best of whatever they want. If they really believed separate chips were the hay to go, why don't they? Intel history has examples of where Intel would put ONTO one chip the stuff that used to be separate. Dual core instead to two separate CPUS. Match processors on the same chip. Cached memory on the chip. These offered both economic and technical advantages. Why would a separate Graphics thing be better? Aside from genomic advances, there are technical resins to put graphics and the core on the same chip.Speed. Are there real benchmarks out there that show separate graphics perform better? Curious minds need to KNOW. Quote from: Geek-9pm on July 08, 2015, 01:19:00 PM Consider this. Intel has put a lot of money and time into its new CPU design. The have the people and tools needed to make the best of whatever they want. If they really believed separate chips were the hay to go, why don't they? Because they manufacture CPUs, not Graphics adapters. Quote Intel history has examples of where Intel would put onto one chip the stuff that used to be separate. Dual core instead to two separate CPUs. Match processors on the same chip. Cached memory on the chip. These offered both economic and technical advantages. The point of integration is so you can get basic, standard capabilities without having to purchase additional hardware. Most motherboards have on-board Audio and Graphics that will work for basic tasks, But dedicated sound and Graphics adapters will still outperform or be better than those integrated solutions for many tasks. Quote Why would a separate Graphics thing be better? A Graphics Processor designed specifically for processing vertices and with hardware support for 3-D graphics capabilities, Dedicated, Graphics memory that operates at a significantly faster speed than system memory and with a much wider bus width to the Graphics processor, as well as being able to function independent of the system CPU, which of course isn't typically possible for an integrated graphics card which has to share DMA with the main processor. (possible exception for some AMD chips which effectively have Radeon GPUs integrated into them) Quote Are there real benchmarks out there that show separate graphics perform better? Curious minds need to know. http://www.pcworld.com/article/2139341/tested-why-almost-every-pc-could-use-a-video-card-upgrade.html Sorry...that was supposed to be a PM.BC_Programmer, Thanks for the link. I will read it. I want to know the facts. That link is to PC World article : "Why almost every PC could use a video card upgrade." Quote AMD and Intel have significantly improved the graphics technologies integrated into their respective CPUs. AMD’s Kaveri-class Accelerated Processing Units (APUs) incorporate the same powerful Graphics Core Next (GCN) architecture of its best discrete Radeon-series graphic processors.It's a laptop Geek... |
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