No
NForce 590 sli motherboard will work with such card as far as it has an appropriate port (PCI-E).
Yes, that is determined by the ports on your motherboard. Once you have a card that will work then you will go into the BIOS and disable the on-board graphics
I have a Lenovo Mahobay motherboard also but recently i purchased a video card. I didn't work in the motherboard along with three others i would suggest just getting a good one from newegg.com for about $120 that is what I am doing
No it cannot you will need to get a agp card or upgrade your motherbord.
The simple answer is no. The board you've mentioned is ancient.
you need an nvidia geforce graphics card to play pes 2008.it will not work in Intel motherboard chiipsets
GPU memory is independent of the motherboard that runs its own memory. You can have only one type of memory on a motherboard, ie. DDR3, and have a graphics card with built in DDR5 memory. Short answer is yes, they are independent of each other.
Yes, it should work perfectly fine. The Asus M3A76-CM has a PCI-E 2.0 x16 rail, and the GTX 460 requires a PCI-E 2.0 x16 rail. Always make sure that the motherboard has a x16 rail, this gives the motherboard the ability to transfer data on all 16 rails of the graphics card, versus an x4, which would only transfer data on 4 rails of the graphics card. -Make sure your PSU is rated good enough for the graphics card Good Luck
Most games require you to have a graphics card. These are fitted to the motherboard and provide a video output. Most graphics cards will also require you to install drivers.
Short answer: yes it will work.The DDR3 memory on the graphics card is mounted in the GPU's PCB. Power regulation and clock signals for that memory is regulated by the GPU.The DDR2 memory on the motherboard is a completely separate situation with the voltage and clock signal being regulated on the motherboard. The two memory banks have little, if anything to do with each other.A PCIe GPU will work in any PCIe motherboard slot.
If the card physically fits on both boards it should work on both. If the graphics card depends on extra power (beyond the part coming from the socket) the problem might stem from lack of power (or consistency power) from a faulty PSU.