There are so many models and prices, and then there are the benchmark’s to keep in mind; and all you want to do is find the best graphics card for the money!
Use this:
whatGFX aims to solve that. We combine the reference hardware details of all the released graphics card with current benchmark results to generate an overall generic benchmark. Our benchmark, while not used by any one else, is a pretty good overall judge of performance. The benchmark takes into account the most important details of the hardware (pixels per second, texels per second, clock speed, shader speed, GFLOPs and a few others, purely based on raw number crunching ability) and then averages them with the results from well known benchmarking software. The end result is a performance score that we feel better represents what you as a user, and probably a gamer, would want to buy.
Check it out, it’s really slick. You just slide the bottom slider to the desired price range to eliminate the cards that are below or above it, click on the AMD or NVIDIA marker, and get the whole run-down of that specific card.
Nice.
Eric J says
http://www.adobe.com/products/premiere/systemreqs/
My choice was easy to make adobe said pick one of these :p
Eric Dye says
LOL!
Word.
Andrew Riches says
I SO want to upgrade my gfx, but my machine works at the moment as it is, and you know what they say about stuff that ain’t broke…
🙁
Eric Dye says
They say, “Break it, so you have to buy a new machine with a better GFX card.”