All this for a maximum power draw of 70W. It's also a very good spec - 40nm fab process, 550MHz core, with 1360MHz shaders, and 512MB of 2000MHz GDDR5 memory, 96 CUDA cores. ![]() This means no need to mess about with powering the card which can sometimes be a pain (both from a PSU standpoint, and physically getting the card plus cabling to fit). OK, so it supports DirectX 10.1, what else is special about the GeForce GT 240? Well, it's NVIDIA's most powerful graphics card that doesn't require an auxiliary PCIe power connector. Also, it's early days for DirectX 11 anyway in terms of games. ![]() Might seem a trivial point when you consider that ATI already have DirectX 11 parts out been delayed until (NVIDIA's Fermi has been delayed until 2010), but it's darn hard to get hold of any Radeon HD 5870 or 5850 cards. OK, so what's special about the GeForce GT 240? Well, to begin with, it fully supports DirectX 10.1, something which other high-end NVIDIA cards don't do. You can get a lot of power for under $100 when it comes to GPUs nowadays, but NVIDIA have just launched the GeForce GT 240 - decent performance, low power consumption and a decent price. White House: Brace for potential Russian cyberattacksĤ1 impressive questions to ask in a job interview
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