J
Joerg
Guest
Lasse Langwadt Christensen wrote:
Thanks. 1920*1080 at 60Hz would be all I need.
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/
Den mandag den 3. november 2014 22.11.48 UTC+1 skrev Joerg:
Lasse Langwadt Christensen wrote:
Den mandag den 3. november 2014 21.58.14 UTC+1 skrev Joerg:
Lasse Langwadt Christensen wrote:
Den mandag den 3. november 2014 21.20.35 UTC+1 skrev Joerg:
Lasse Langwadt Christensen wrote:
Den sřndag den 2. november 2014 18.24.23 UTC+1 skrev Joerg:
Joerg wrote:
Carl Ijames wrote:
Don't know about computation speed, but this link says the
video card will drive 3 monitors:
http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gt-720/specifications.
Looking at Dell's site I don't see any mention of
expansion slots, and looking at the one picture with the
cover off I really can't see any sockets beyond the video
card, so if any further expansion is important you need to
ask Dell for clarification.
Looks like you are right:
http://www.dell.com/ed/business/p/xps-8700/pd
http://core0.staticworld.net/images/article/2013/07/1253541_sr-1160-100047019-orig.jpg
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2047487/dell-xps-8700-special-editions-review-a-little-less-performance-for-a-lot-less-cash.html
Quote "There's only one PCIe x16 slot, which means you won't
be able to add a second video card to take advantage of
Nvidia's SLI technology".
No slots. There's one more card in the bottom, not sure what
that is. But if the video can drive three monitors it should
be fine, I never added any cards to my current PC either.
Only question is, how can one connect two regular OPC monitors
to this?
http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gt-720/product-images
I'd expect that you can connect a monitor to each of the three
outputs, VGA,DVI,HDMI. I have an old geforce and that's how that
works
VGA is not much use, but unless you want to watch something from
Hollywood DVI and HDMI is the same thing
I do a lot of video conferencing via web where content moves. Other
than that just CAD, no movie streaming and such.
Then DVI will works just fine, HDMI is just DVI with optional audio
and the encryption Hollywood insists on if you bought a blueray movie
So just plug a monitor into both the HDMI and DVI output
Ok, but can one be sure that an ordinary cheap 27" 1920*1080 monitor
will plug into either of them? For example, the ViewSonic VA2702w I have
here only has the large DVI connector, not the narrow HDMI. It does have
VGA though which I am using right now (good enough for my purposes).
yes, for regular computer monitor HDMI and DVI is the same thing, you just
need the right cable or a adapter to get the wires in the right holes
So then here in the photo the center one is HDMI and the right one is
DVI and that's where the two monitors should go to? I could also hook
one up to VGA like I have now.
yes, you can hook up three monitors
http://www.geforce.com/hardware/desktop-gpus/geforce-gt-720/product-images
Says dual-link or DVI-D for the DVI connector in the specs, whatever
that means.
single-link is three differential pairs, dual-link has three extra pairs that are used for the higher bandwidth need for very high resolutions
afair single link DVI is limited to 1920x1200 at 60 Hz
Thanks. 1920*1080 at 60Hz would be all I need.
--
Regards, Joerg
http://www.analogconsultants.com/