Comocat said:
I hate how hardware is named, I'm pretty sure my video card is 5 numbers followed by 10 letters without any vowels. I'm sure the system makes sense to enthusiasts and peope who follow the latest trends, but I'll be goddamned if I can figure out which processor is faster or what kind of ram i need to feed my harddrive.
TBH you ignore 90% of what is written. Half of that stuff will be the brand name; "Radeon HD" "Nvidia GeForce" and the manufacturer "Gainward" "Sapphire" or W/E. Then there'll be the model number, a 3 digit number along the lines of 240, 560, 670 or W/E for Nvidia, and a 4 digit number along the lines of 4570, 5670 or 6770 for Radeon. After that Nvidia puts GT, GTS or GTX as a further indication of its classing amongst their video cards, and Radeon puts nothing if I remember correctly. After that there will be a number indicating how much VRAM it has, generally averaging 2Gb.
Whilst most of this will mean nothing to you, it doesn't need to.
Laptop graphics cards will generally have an 'm' after the model number to signify "Mobile", but for a desktop you don't have to worry about that. Really its along the lines of Microsoft Xbox 360 Slim 200Gb HDD. Brand name, model name, variation of model, storage size. Its just that Video Card sellers tend to put all that information up whenever the advertise for the dual purpose of confusing people who don't know any better into buying products that the store wants them to, and so that those who do know what it all means being able to garner enough information out of it to make an informed decision.
Just be glad you haven't looked at the specification page for the cards, as there is a lot more info there that you should be thankful doesn't end up in the name.
Bhaalspawn said:
Video Card: All that matters is the size (Megabytes, Gigabytes, ect) of the video memory
Uhh... No.
There is a reason why everyone will say "I need to know more than "I've got a 1Gb Video Card"". The VRAM capacity of a card is largely meaningless - especially since a number of cards don't have the transfer rate to actually utilize all of it. All that matters for the GPU is the model number; 3 digits for Nvidia [If you've got a 4 digit one its too old], 4 digits for Radeon. If you have a higher number you're generally going to be fine, though understanding how the model numbers are arranged is important if you want good performance. Go for a mid range number [50-70] and you'll be fine though for Nvidia, Radeon I haven't paid attention to for a while but it'll be a similar principle.
OT: Only thing in hardware that has ever failed me is my Guitar Hero guitar after several years of service. Now the keys are hard to push in, and get stuck temporarily after they're in, which makes it very difficult to play songs with it - especially faster songs. Not worth getting a new one though, as I can make do with it. Might see if I can clean it out one day, but for now I CBF.