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Showing 1-10 of 674 questions
  • 25
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Answer:
For better performance get a 128 bit. Essentially it can work with data twice as fast as the 64 bit (if you want in depth info there are many websites). And low profile in this context means that the physical card is smaller, and therefor has a low profile in the case. This would be important if you didn't have a lot o… see more For better performance get a 128 bit. Essentially it can work with data twice as fast as the 64 bit (if you want in depth info there are many websites). And low profile in this context means that the physical card is smaller, and therefor has a low profile in the case. This would be important if you didn't have a lot of spare room, but if you have tons of space, it will work just as well without any major changes in performance. Only real difference between a low profile and normal profile is that larger ones won't overheat as quickly, but so long as your computer has adequate cooling and isn't dusty, there really should be no difference. see less For better performance get a 128 bit. Essentially it can work with data twice as fast as the 64 bit (if you want in depth info there are many websites). And low profile in this context means that the physical card is smaller, and therefor has a low profile in the case. This would be important if you didn't have a lot of spare room, but if you have tons of space, it will work just as well without any major changes in performance. Only real difference between a low profile and normal profile is that larger ones won't overheat as quickly, but so long as your computer has adequate cooling and isn't dusty, there really should be no difference.
Kenny
· February 28, 2015
  • 11
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The answer is yes. I have one installed on my HP Elite 8300 SFF PC and it works. You'll have to install the SFF bracket (which comes with the card). Although it recommends the 300W power supply, the stock 240W hasn't given me any trouble.
705
· June 9, 2017
  • 3
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Yeah it should fit the cards about the same size plus you have the right slot for it it is pci 2.0 but 2.0 is backwards compatible with pci I'm running this card in a old gateway you should have no problem hope this helps.
Eric
· January 9, 2015
  • 2
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whisper quiet. I have a dell optiplex 3010 desktop with it and love it. My desktop and performance rating went up to 7.0 on my win 7 workstation as well. If you want no noice, consider the zotac card with out a fan, 1 gb of ram and about $30 less.
Scott Mutterer
· August 5, 2014
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Of course it can but so can every other card out there. It just depends on the level of detail you want to play it on and since sims isn't that high on graphics it should run it amazingly.
Juan
· December 5, 2014
  • 1
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Yes works with Win 7 64
I have 2 of these cards
running 4 Samsung LED Monitors ( 27"x2 and 24"x2 ) - and the 5th over to a Samsung LED TV - 32" -- no problems

RJ
· January 14, 2016
  • 1
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It is HDMI type A. Which is the regular full size HDMI cable.
Juan
· November 15, 2014
  • 1
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No since this is design for a desktop, not a labtop. Graphic cards for laptops are a entirely differnt model. Look up GT 730M or better yet, for more detail go to Geforce to see the latest models for a labtop which they call notebooks.
Robert A. Westerman
· October 20, 2014
  • 1
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Yes
john
· November 19, 2014
  • 1
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The 730 runs fine under Ubuntu 13.10 with Linux 3.12 Kernel. I'm sure the newer v. 16.10 is no exception . Nvidia has the drivers for both 32 and 64 bit versions on their website. The only drawback I am aware of is there is no overclocking support for Pascal, Kepler, or Maxwell GPU's under Ubuntu, but there is OC supp… see more The 730 runs fine under Ubuntu 13.10 with Linux 3.12 Kernel. I'm sure the newer v. 16.10 is no exception . Nvidia has the drivers for both 32 and 64 bit versions on their website. The only drawback I am aware of is there is no overclocking support for Pascal, Kepler, or Maxwell GPU's under Ubuntu, but there is OC support for older GPU Architecture using CoolBits, so OC support may become available later as this card is very overclockable. see less The 730 runs fine under Ubuntu 13.10 with Linux 3.12 Kernel. I'm sure the newer v. 16.10 is no exception . Nvidia has the drivers for both 32 and 64 bit versions on their website. The only drawback I am aware of is there is no overclocking support for Pascal, Kepler, or Maxwell GPU's under Ubuntu, but there is OC support for older GPU Architecture using CoolBits, so OC support may become available later as this card is very overclockable.
Robert Hayes
· October 28, 2016