Graphics - Page 71
FollowWhether you're interested in games, CGI movies, or the latest hardware to push your pixels, Tom's Hardware provides you with the latest news in graphics.
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An overview of the most commonly used video formats, from AVI and MOV to MPEG, compression methods and an explanation of MPEG encoding with an example.
Price conscious buyers looking for the best bang for the buck should check this out. The latest Savage4 graphics card from Diamond comes with 166 MHz chip clock.
This article continues the 32 graphic card Meltdown by showing hardware performance with each card's shipping driver. Benchmarks include Shogo (DirectX), Expendable (DirectX), Descent3 (DirectX/OpenGL) and...
What kind of performance can someone get out of these three top notch 3D accelerators when plugged into the fastest system we have in our lab? Removing the CPU as the bottleneck really gives us a clear picture...
This first part of the 32-3D card article discusses the driver issues and feature list of the cards. Be careful, even this part one is 'only' 230 pages.
Professional video processing, video via the Internet, video conferencing systems and standards - everything the IT specialist should know.
The World is turning digital. The vision of a perfect blend of telecommunication technology, consumer electronics and the PC will soon be a reality.
During these days of higher end consumer graphics cards, there are few cards that offer innovative graphical features
3D-gaming used to be a tough call with non-Intel CPUs for a long time. The floating-point performance of CPUs from AMD, Cyrix, IBM, IDT, etc. could never really come close to the number crunching ability of a...
We take a close look at today's 3D-technology and lists all the features you should expect from a state-of-the art 3D-card
It's not too long ago that Tom's Hardware Guide introduced 3Dfx's upcoming Voodoo3 chip to you, and many of you may have thought that this new chip will ensure 3Dfx's role as supplier of the world's fastest 3D...
Banshee, the last chip that 3Dfx released, could not really impress any of us when it was released last year and since Comdex 1998 we are highly anticipating the Voodoo3, a chip that's supposed to prove 3Dfx's...
The RIVA TNT is out for several months now and most people agree that it is currently the best 2D/3D solution available.
Some people seem to have doubts about the temperature that I measured of the Rage 128 chip.
Impressive was the presentation of the Rage 128 back then in Toronto at the end of August. The upcoming Rage128 3D accelerator chip would be an amazing 2D/3D solution
Times are changing in the graphics business. Prices of graphics cards are dropping and this might change a lot in the card makers business.
The Voodoo² chipset is available for some months now and still there is not much of a competitor to it yet.
What's the best 3D chip for you? Is 3Dfx still on top of things or is NVIDIA taking over the lead?
Real3D's critical comments to Bert's article. Is AGP a great improvement? How does the i740 stick up?
Everybody who has a 3Dfx add-on card has to put up with reduced picture quality at high resolutions. At 1280x1024 fonts are often blurred and working with your computer becomes all but a pleasure.
My preview of Banshee, Savage3D and RIVA TNT was causing quite a stir, just the way I love it.
I am pleased to see the keen interest that many of you have in AGP related graphics performance. In truth, the issue is multidimensional.
The late summer and fall 1998 will bring us a bunch of new 3D graphics chips, most of them already announced for quite a while
Anyone who has tested more than a few graphics cards has observed that there is not always a very big performance delta between an AGP graphics card and a similarly configured PCI graphics card
Including Matrox MGA-G200 and first look of NVIDIA RIVA ZX
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