I just put together a computer with Ivy Bridge 3770K cpu, in fact here it is:
http://youtu.be/AdRuTjcT_uw
And as part of my original plan i also bought Geforce EVGA 670 FTW from newegg, which i think i need to return for refund ASAP because i'm running out of time to return it ! ! !
And the reason to return it is simply because i think i don't need it ? I don't play games AT ALL, but i do edit video.
What happened is i was away from computer building for a while ( temporarily switched to Macs ) and back when i last built computers even dedicated graphics were too slow. So i automatically assumed i needed a fast graphics card and got the 670.
But now i realize HD400 is not the joke that i thought it was, and it's my last opportunity to send the 670 back BUT i can't really "test out" the HD400 beyond windows experience index ( which on it is quite abysmal, everything else on my computer is 7.7 to 7.9 ) because i don't know where i may need the graphics power.
all i really want is to be able to edit high bitrate HD videos ( think 1080p @ 60 fps @ 28 mbps ) and i want google earth with 3D buildings to work smoothly.
i am going to be using a 47" Vizio HDTV as as a screen ( the one in the video ).
so what's the verdict - should i send the Geforce 670 back ? i didn't even open the box on the geforce.
given that i don't need the horsepower ( although i use Sony Vegas to edit video, and CUDA can accelerate Vegas 11 ) i guess my main concern is whether i will run into incompatibility issues with the HD4000 ? i already had to return a Radeon recently because it was occasionally giving me a black screen. Geforce is the only card i can really trust at this point.
the only time i had a graphics card incompatibility so far is when i tried isntalling Autodesk Revit on a 13" macbook pro and it wouldn't run on the integrated 9400M graphics ( gave graphics error ) - but i was able to run it without problems on all my other computers. i would like to make sure i don't have to deal with such nonsense if i go with HD4000 graphics ?
http://youtu.be/AdRuTjcT_uw
And as part of my original plan i also bought Geforce EVGA 670 FTW from newegg, which i think i need to return for refund ASAP because i'm running out of time to return it ! ! !
And the reason to return it is simply because i think i don't need it ? I don't play games AT ALL, but i do edit video.
What happened is i was away from computer building for a while ( temporarily switched to Macs ) and back when i last built computers even dedicated graphics were too slow. So i automatically assumed i needed a fast graphics card and got the 670.
But now i realize HD400 is not the joke that i thought it was, and it's my last opportunity to send the 670 back BUT i can't really "test out" the HD400 beyond windows experience index ( which on it is quite abysmal, everything else on my computer is 7.7 to 7.9 ) because i don't know where i may need the graphics power.
all i really want is to be able to edit high bitrate HD videos ( think 1080p @ 60 fps @ 28 mbps ) and i want google earth with 3D buildings to work smoothly.
i am going to be using a 47" Vizio HDTV as as a screen ( the one in the video ).
so what's the verdict - should i send the Geforce 670 back ? i didn't even open the box on the geforce.
given that i don't need the horsepower ( although i use Sony Vegas to edit video, and CUDA can accelerate Vegas 11 ) i guess my main concern is whether i will run into incompatibility issues with the HD4000 ? i already had to return a Radeon recently because it was occasionally giving me a black screen. Geforce is the only card i can really trust at this point.
the only time i had a graphics card incompatibility so far is when i tried isntalling Autodesk Revit on a 13" macbook pro and it wouldn't run on the integrated 9400M graphics ( gave graphics error ) - but i was able to run it without problems on all my other computers. i would like to make sure i don't have to deal with such nonsense if i go with HD4000 graphics ?
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