
ZOTAC Expands Silent ZONE Edition Lineup
November 27th, 2009 admin
ZOTAC is expanding its Silent ZONE Edition Lineup with the new ZOTAC GeForce GT 220 ZONE Edition. This silent graphic card is powered by a NVIDIA GT 220 graphics processor with 48 CUDA cores and 1GB of high-speed DDR2 memory. The ZOTAC GeForce GT 220 ZONE Edition supports Microsoft DirectX 10.1, DirectCompute, OpenGL 3.2, and NVIDIA CUDA powered games and applications. “ZOTAC is one of the leading manufacturers of silent graphics cards. Our lineup of ZOTAC GeForce ZONE Edition graphics cards has won many awards
Related Posts

Hardwareoverclock.com has posted another videocard review. Last week they has take a look at the Zotac GTX295 Single PCB. ZOTAC packs the raw power of two NVIDIA GeForce GTX 200 graphics processors on a single card for unmatched 3D processing power…. [PCSTATS]
Read More →

The EVGA NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295 CO-OP Edition graphics card features the power of two GTX 200 Series processors on one graphics card. This graphics card delivers unrivaled graphics performance in the hottest DirectX 10 games, including Far Cry 2, Mirrors Edge, and Call of Duty 5: World at War. Combine two EVGA GeForce GTX 295 graphics cards to...

PNY announced the NVIDIA GeForce GT 220 1GB and GeForce 210 512MB graphics cards today. For the first time in PNY’s history, the cards now come with a native HDMI port, giving users the flexibility to connect both audio and video using a single cable. The GeForce GT 220 will cost about $120 while the GeForce 210 runs approximately $70. Additional...

Chris checks in with an update on our 2009 CPU Charts, pricing on ATI’s Radeon HD 5800/5900s graphics cards, news of official bitstreaming support, an interesting tidbit on power consumption in Eyefinity mode, and Zotac’s second-gen mini-ITX board. Video card – Radeon – ATI Technologies – Central processing unit –...

After decades of fitful progress, parallel processing is suddenly hot and will soon be commonplace on ordinary PCs. For applications rich in data-level parallelism, performance is soaring by leaps and bounds. Multicore CPUs from Intel and AMD are all good, but the game-changers are the next-gen GPUs from Nvidia and AMD/ATI. These chips are evolving...

Catalyst 9.12 brings support for DirectCompute 10.1 using Radeon 4700/4800 series cards in both single and Crossfire configurations as well as OpenGL 3.2 extension support across the full range of cards…
Read More →

DiRT 2 promises to be one of the first compelling games to make use of DirectX 11 enhancements. We have a look at the title, its presentation, and its performance in this month’s game analysis, comparing graphics cards from both ATI and Nvidia. Nvidia – Video card – DirectX – ATI Technologies – Hardware
Read More →

NVIDIA recently launched their first GDDR5 graphics cards. The new GeForce GT 240 is based on NVIDIA’s brand-new 40 nm G215 graphics processor and features 96 shaders. Axle has chosen to use an Arctic Cooling heatsink on their GT 240 design. … [PCSTATS]
Read More →

The market for nettops—small, highly-integrated, mini-ITX desktops, typically based around Intel’s Atom—didn’t explode off the block the way netbooks did in the past 18 months, but an increasing number of manufacturers from Acer to Dell have released new designs built around the standard, and the systems in question are steadily becoming...

Say hello to the GeForce GTX 480 and GeForce GTX 470 GeForce – Nvidia – GeForce GTX 470 – GeForce GTX 480 – Graphics processing unit
Read More →
Related Tweets from Twitter
Related News from Digg
Leave a comment
| Trackback











