By upgrading the graphics card.
No.
There is no way to upgrade the memory on a graphics card. The "limit" of memory is the maximum amount of shared video memory that the graphics card will occupy in the system's RAM. The best way to get better graphics performance in this situation is to buy a similar NVIDIA card and SLI them together.
Yes, this is called shared memory. But it isn't useful, its mostly a gimmick because the memory speed is much slower than a graphics card with dedicated memory.
No, a graphics card does not store any permanent data like programs or games. The video memory (VRAM) on a graphics card is just like regular memory--it is volatile. This means that any game information stored in the graphics card memory is removed as soon as you close the program it is associated with or turn off your computer.
Depends on your video card/graphics card (Intel HD Graphics 3000?). Check your video memory. If it has more than or exactly 128mb of VRAM, then it'll run.
graphics media accelerator or in other words graphics card or video card. a hardware for computer to boost up the speed of the display graphics of the computer. it also ends up the sharing of memory of the computer RAM for the display graphics. it also enables the computer to have graphics memory depending on the memory of the graphics accelerator allowint the computer to have games requiring high graphical memory.
Graphics cards are rated in MHz, memory and frame rate.
The integrated video card will
Yes it is.
the memory between the video card and the mother board DO NOT need to match. the memory on the vid card CANNOT be upgraded.
You can use AGP graphics card with any type of memory DDR. DDR2, DDR3. Graphics card memory type does not have any relation with memory type used on your PC's motherboard. - Neeraj Sharma I believe this answer is incorrect. I have found that some motherboards have onboard graphics which are connected to the pci slots. This creates a connection with a PCI graphics card, and the differences in RAM type will indeed cause problems for the driver and the OS. Bill Newman