I like 3dfx, fairly good performance, they provide info, opensource drivers etc... the new ones are a bit too expensive though (up to $300), the older models (voodoo 2) are about $100 (still good performance (for me) but does not match newer competing cards)...
erik Andy Bastien wrote: > > There are those who would have you believe that Chris Gray wrote: > > On my home box I run Windows 98 for games and Debian(Woody) for serious > > (non-graphics-intensive) work. I want to upgrade my video card. I'm more > > interested in something that will be straightforward to install on both > > platforms and will give respectable performance for a while to come. I want > > to avoid the situation I'm in now. I have a cheap S3 Savage4 based AGP card > > for which there is no X server in the Debian packages. I can get X servers > > elsewhere but on exit they crash my system. > > > > At the moment I'm leaning toward an ATI Fury. I'd be grateful for any > > advice, opinions, or caveats. > > > > The most important single factor is going to be whether you're > interested in a 3D card or not. If you are, the NVidia GeForce 2 cards > are probably the best out there (although Voodoo fans will probably > argue this point). The GeForce 2MX is the bargain version, but as far > as price/performance goes you can't beat it at ~ $100. The GeForce > 2GTS is the more expensive one, going for around $200. Be aware, > though, that these require an AGP 2.0 motherboard. > > If you don't card about 3D, then the Millenium that was mentioned > isn't a bad way to go if you can get your hands on one cheap, and the > Millenium II comes in an AGP version. You can also get an NVidia > TNT2-based card for under $50, and that has good 2D performance (AGP > 4X, 16 MB, I think the RAMDACs are 300 Mhz). The TNT2 cards still > have decent 3D performace, although you might find yourself limited to > 800x600 or less in newer games and/or if you have a low-end CPU. > > The Matrox Millenium G400 are good if you primarily want a good 2D > card but also want accelerated 3D. ATI's advantage seems to lie > mostly in their hardware DVD/MPEG2 support. I really don't know if > this is supported in their Linux drivers. > > The NVidia cards have a pretty good accelerated driver for XFree 4.0.1 > that you can download from NVidia's website. For 3D on XFree 3.3.6, you > might be better off with a Voodoo card, although IMHO you'll end up > spending more for no overall gain in peformance. > > Enough rambling... > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null