NForce 590 sli motherboard will work with such card as far as it has an appropriate port (PCI-E).
To anyone that has read the original answer to this. NO you can not sli two different cards. Only amd crossfire can do that within families. Sli works in a way that it has to be the same exact card to work properly, that is why motherboards are harder to find for sli.
You may need to enable SLI in your motherboard's BIOS.
SLI Systems was created in 2001.
The population of SLI Systems is 100.
No. Motherboards NEVER support BOTH SLI and CrossFire. Usually one OR the other. Mostly because NVIDIA created and uses SLI and AMD (Which owns ATI) created and uses CrossFire. You'll have to check which your specific motherboard supports.Both SLI and CrossFire do the same thing and they work the exact same way. They both allow Graphics cards to work together.This accepting one computer program or idea but not others is what I like to call warism (ware-ism).
SLI-ing two different GPUs is a tricky business. Generally speaking, it is not a good idea to SLI different cards as they may have compatibility issues and whatnot. If you wish to SLI, do it with the same cards.
A. Ro sli has written: 'The dynamic behaviour of prestressed bridges'
Yes, There is no reason it should not work. I would use a better motherboard if you are going to put that graphics card in it though. perhaps a 700 series SLI not a 500 series SLI. Also an 8800 GT would complement this board very nicely.
SLI is new technology that allows you to scale graphics performance.
If SLI is in operating condition then sLI itself will indicates that whether load is in safe mode. But if SLI is not working then one must be considered 40 % factor of safety of crane SWL and in SLI working condition it will be considered 20 % of its SWL.
SLI is not in the graphics card SLI is running two or more of the same graphics cards at the same time to increase the performance but you need a power supply and a motherboard that supports it