There is a problem that I believe is more common than it should be - Owners of powerful 3d cards are not getting the best of them.
Basic advice is this -
Definately get hold of, and install the Via 4in1 drivers.
set your agp speed to it’s lowest setting in your bios (the speed setting may only appear after you install 4in1)
These work for me, and my GeForce 3 now has excelent performance. these cards piss on all the latest generation of consoles. In fact a low/medium spec PC with a ge-force 3 is about the same as an X-Box, in game performance, technicaly it’s better.
I am no expert but I’ve seen time and time again that the 4in1 installation fixes things for people with powerful cards.
SDMB you may move this. I wanted to put it where people where asking questions about their 3d cards though.
I’d like to see atleast a little bit of blue in my status bar when I click submit this time. Not nothing at all.
If the SDMB would let me edit my own post like it used to I’d add that information. but now we have to rely on people reading the replies. you being one of them (another reply covered what you said)
Only partially, lobley. Windows XP does not require 4n1s even if you run a Via chipset.
You’re right though, being able to edit posts would be nice but there are fears that it could cause more harm than good in some instances. So, the board in their wisdom decided not to allow it at all. I suspect it is a good thing as it has cause people in general to be more careful with their posts.
Being the skeptic I am I took a quick spin to my favorite hardware review site figuring such a card must certainly have mention there. I wasn’t disappointed. Tom’s Hardware had the following to say about this card in their article on May 14, Matrox Parhelia-512 - The Challenger (highlighting mine):
I agree with the article that it is nice to see some competition. NVidia was looming a little too large for my tastes as they looked to be the only game in town for awhile. I like NVidia’s products so far (and I think they have the best driver writers in the industry) but lack of competition is never good for the consumer in my view. Till I see benchmarks of the Parhelia I’ll reserve judgement (but keep my fingers crossed that they actually deliver).