Sapphire Radeon HD5770 Vapor-X 1 GB DDR5 2DVI/HDMI/DisplayPort
Product Description
Sapphire Radeon HD5770 Vapor-X 1 GB DDR5 2DVI/HDMI/DisplayPort Now, more people than ever can experience real innovation in DirectX 11 gaming with ATI Radeon HD 5700 Series graphics processors. Loaded with advanced technology, these GPUs have the power and premium features you need for fully immersive gameplay. Expand your visual real estate across up to three displays and get lost in the action with revolutionary ATI Eyefinity Technology. Using ATI Stream technology, accelerate even the most demanding applications and do more than ever with your PC. The first GPUs in this class to offer full support for DirectX 11, these GPUs enable rich, realistic visuals and explosive HD gaming performance so you can dominate the competition.
This review is from: Sapphire Radeon HD5770 Vapor-X 1 GB DDR5 2DVI/HDMI/DisplayPort PCI-Express Video Card 100283VX-2L (Personal Computers)
I bought this card to upgrade the onboard graphics in my HP Pavilion p6720f (running Windows 7 Home 64bit).
Before installing this card in my computer, I also had to upgrade my power supply. The power supply unit that came with my HP was only good for 250 Watts. I went with a 600W OCZ Mod X-Stream. Installing the new power supply was very straight-forward. No complications here.
The complication came when installing the graphics card. After seating the card in my PCI-E slot and connecting it to the power supply, I booted my computer and loaded the software disk into my DVD drive. No matter what I tried, I could not get the driver software to install. ATI Catalyst gave the following response each time: "Catalyst Install Manager Has Stopped Working". After 5 hours of troubleshooting and a 2 hour trip to India via HP's technical support, I stumbled upon the root of the problem and the solution:
"FIX: An application that uses the Mfc80.dll module or the Mfc80u.dll module crashes after you install a product that updates the module version
You install a product that updates the Mfc80.dll module or the Mfc80u.dll module on the computer from version 8.0.50727.870 to version 8.0.50727.3078. For example, you install Microsoft SQL Server 2008. When you run an application that is built with Microsoft Visual Studio 2005, an access violation occurs in the Mfc80.dll module or in the Mfc80u.dll module. And, the application crashes.
Note This problem applies to many other applications, including applications that are used on Windows 7 ..."
"If you get the "Catalyst Install Manager has failed" error then most likely you have your .Net redirection of the mfc80u.dll file screwed up by some program (...ahem... SQL Server Express 2008...).
No need to edit the manifest files of the ATI setup files because .Net will automatically redirect to the latest version, depending on the profile settings..."
"It is a bug in the mfc80u.dll version 8.0.50727.1833 file. Install the latest fix (version 8.0.50727.3079) from the Adobe website because it's not on the Microsoft site yet.
Note: This has nothing to do with Adobe or their products, we just want the correct vcredist_x86.exe (Visual Studio C++ 2005 redistributable"
Bottom Line:
If your ATI Catalyst drivers do not install properly, then you will very likely need to download and run "KB961894 - VC++ Post 2005 SP1 Redistributable".
(Make sure you download the correct file for your version of Windows, i.e., 32 bit vs. 64 bit)
Other than a less than pleasant install experience, the card seems very nice. It would have been wonderful if Sapphire had a better technical support system. Instead of live support, I had to go through their "Ticket" system, whereby you submit a question/problem and somebody on their end responds back (maybe within an hour or maybe within a couple days). Hopefully this review can help someone who encounters the same issue that I did.
ASUS Radeon HD 6870 1GB 256-bit GDDR5
Product Description
ASUS Radeon HD 6870 1GB 256-bit GDDR5 A revolutionary and innovative selection of fine metals to create a new alloy for critical power components, resulting in a 15% performance increase, 2.5 times longer product lifespan and 35°C cooler operation compared to reference.
Asus ATI Radeon HD5450 Silence
Product Description
Asus ATI Radeon HD5450 Silence Asus ATI Radeon HD5450 Silence 1GB DDR3 VGA/DVI/HDMI Low Profile PCI-Express Video Card
This review is from: Asus ATI Radeon HD5450 Silence - 1 GB DDR3 VGA/DVI/HDMI Low Profile PCI-Express Video Card EAH5450 SILENT/DI/1GD3 (Personal Computers)
i was nervous buying this for my slim PC but after researching i went with this graphics card.
it seems to work great, i can play some games that wouldn't run on my slim PC before - but i am not a major pc gamer. i mainly bought this card to help with some graphic work that i do on the machine.
no overheating issues so far and everything seems to be going great. i've had it in there for half a year now and, like i mentioned before, no issues.
EVGA GeForce GTS 450 FPB
Product Description
EVGA GeForce GTS 450 FPB The EVGA GTS 450 FPB (Free Performance Boost) edition dominates the competition with more than 2x the DirectX 11 geometry processing power for unparalleled game realism in the hottest titles. GeForce your rig and gear up with the latest industry leading technologies like high performance NVIDIA GeForce drivers and incredibly realistic NVIDIA PhysX in-game effects.The EVGA GTS 450 features 192 CUDA cores, a high speed GDDR5 memory interface with 1GB onboard and full DirectX 11 support providing unrivalled performance and breathtaking image quality. Specifications include the GTS 450 (822 MHz core clock) chipset, 1024MB (1GB) of 0.5ns GDDR5 memory with a 3608 MHz memory clock and 57.7 GB/second memory bandwidth, 128 bit memory interface, 1645 MHz Shader Clock, 192 CUDA cores, and PCI Express 2.0 compatibility. Additional features include Microsoft DirectX 11 support, NVIDIA PhysX and NVIDIA PureVideo HD technologies, NVIDIA 2-way SLI readiness, NVIDIA 3D Vision Ready, NVIDIA CUDA technology with CUDA C/C++, DirectCompute 5.0, and OpenCL support, PCI-Express 2.0 support, OpenGL 4.0 support, Dual Link HDCP capability, and Microsoft Windows XP/Vista/7 support. Connections are 1 Mini-HDMI 1.4a connector and 2 Dual-Link DVI connectors. Package includes the EVGA Driver/software disc with EVGA Precision Tuning utility, 1 DVI to VGA adaptor, 1 6-pin PCI-E power adapter, and a one year warranty with a second year free if registered within 30 days at www.evga .
This review is from: EVGA GeForce GTS 450 FPB (Free Performance Boost) 1204 MB GDDR5 PCI Express 2.0 2DVI/Mini-HDMI SLI Ready Graphics Card, 01G-P3-1450-TR (Personal Computers)
I knew exactly what I was purchasing when I purchased this card. It isn't top of the line, but for ~$95, it is perfect. It plays all the games I want to play on my desktop, and it works great in Linux. I already have a gaming pc with an ATI 5850 in it, so this was for casual use.
It plays everything I have thrown at it.
Great bang for your buck if you can catch it with a rebate or on sale. Extremely quiet as well. I can't hardly notice it is even in my computer.
Sapphire Radeon HD 5770 1 GB DDR5 2DVI/HDMI/DisplayPort
Product Description
Sapphire Radeon HD 5770 1 GB DDR5 2DVI/HDMI/DisplayPort Sapphire Radeon HD5770 1GB DDR5 2DVI/HDMI/DisplayPort PCI-Express Video Card
This review is from: Sapphire Radeon HD 5770 1 GB DDR5 2DVI/HDMI/DisplayPort PCI-Express Video Card 100283-3L (Personal Computers)
I bought this video card to play World of Warcraft. It is a huge improvement from the last one, I'm able to play in Ultra mode with 46 fps. No more slow motion when casting spells.
For the price, it's a very nice video card for this kind of games. If you want to play more video-demanding games, you should check another one.
Evga GeForce GT 430 1024 MB DDR3
Product Description
Evga GeForce GT 430 1024 MB DDR3 GeForce your PC with the EVGA GT 430 and get the ultimate performance upgrade. Tap into the horsepower of the GPU for a visually-charged boost on your favorite applications. Edit your photos and HD videos and push the limits of your web experience with a new generation of GPU-accelerated browsers. Level-up your game with the next-generation gaming architecture built from the ground up for DirectX 11. Take the latest 3D movies home with Blu-ray 3D and GeForce. All this and more at an excellent value. The EVGA GT 430 features 96 CUDA Cores, a high speed DDR3 memory interface with 1024MB onboard and full DirectX 11 support providing breathtaking image quality. NVIDIA PhysX and CUDA technologies power realistic effects for an interactive gaming experience. Specifications include 700 MHz core clock, 1024MB (1GB) of DDR3 memory with a 1400 MHz memory clock and 22.4 GB/second memory bandwidth, 128 bit memory bit width, 1400 MHz Shader Clock, 96 CUDA cores, and PCI Express 2.0 compatibility. Additional features include Microsoft DirectX 11 Support, NVIDIA PhysX Technology, Blu-Ray 3D Support, Hardware Video Decode Acceleration, NVIDIA CUDA technology with CUDA C/C++, DirectCompute 5.0, and OpenCL support, PCI-Express 2.0 support, OpenGL 4.0 support, Dual Link HDCP capability, TrueHD and DTS-HD Audio Bitstreaming Support and Microsoft Windows XP/Vista/7 support. Connections are HDMI 1.4a and Dual-Link DVI-I. Package includes the EVGA Driver/software disc with EVGA Precision Tuning utility and a limited 2 year warranty if registered within 30 days at www.evga .
This review is from: Evga GeForce GT 430 1024 MB DDR3 PCI Express 2.0 DVI/HDMI/VGA Graphics Card, 01G-P3-1430-LR (Personal Computers)
When Nvidia released the GT 430 reference design in the last quarter of 2010, hardware pundits everywhere were amazed by the card's potential. Here was a bitstreaming video card, bulging with electronic muscle, with a respectably low power footprint. In short, it was the perfect HTPC video card. The only problem was that Nvidia's offering was a little slow to market, and after a barrage of price drops on comparable ATI products, the initial price point of the GT 430 was a little high for what you were getting.
Flash forward to the present, and the price on the GT 430 cards is dropping...dropping...dropping. As they move farther away from the $100 mark and closer to the $50 mark, the cards have shaped up into one heck of a nice deal. I love mine. In fact, I would marry mine if the state I lived in somehow allowed it. We would live in a log cabin together and sell crafts to tourists. Just me and the GT 430 against the world. No worries, no regrets. I...I love you, GT 430. Let's never fight.
PROS:
- It laughs at your 1080p HD videos. Laughs at them, pushes them down, and takes their lunch money. The card has enough horsepower to play back some kind of crazy, as-yet-undiscovered 5000p video stream, let alone whatever weak 1080p kung fu you'd like to throw at it. Your media center is going to be future-proofed for quite some time. I put this card in a 780G-based motherboard with onboard ATI HD 3200 graphics--considered some of the best onboard graphics available just a few years back--and the GT 430 just destroys it. Sure, discrete graphics solutions are generally going to be faster than onboard video, this is well-known, but the difference was night and day. You want to play a 1080p movie in Windows 7 Media Center while you page through some other film offerings in MediaBrowser? The menus are smooth as butter. You want to watch HD television with the program guide overlayed on the TV stream without graphics slowdowns? Yeah, not a problem. The card delivers.
- Quieter than you would think. The active cooling on the card initially had me concerned about the decibels it might put out, but now that the card is installed, the fan on this EVGA part is whisper quiet. I can't hear it over the sound of my hard drives.
- Good enough for modest gaming, if that's your thing. People who compare this budget Fermi model to graphics cards meant for gamers pretty much miss the point of a card like this. It's meant to be sandwiched into a tiny HTPC case, where it can push out some decent graphical horsepower through a digital output without using a lot of electricity and without generating a lot of heat. If you need a giant, full-sized PCI-E card that will take up a square foot of space in your computer case so you can get 200 FPS and pwn noobs in Call of Duty 11: Duty Harder, or something, then look elsewhere. This card is not for you. Also, that's your mom calling you. Dinner is ready. But if you have light gaming needs and tend to play older games, like World of Warcraft, then the GT 430 has you covered. I'm at 1920 x 1080 resolution at the highest detail settings with no slowdown. Life is good.
- Made by EVGA. For the uninitiated, the thinking is usually that one company's implementation of an Nvidia reference design is similar if not exactly the same as another company's, so it doesn't really matter what name is on the card, just buy whatever's cheapest. But believe me, the company does matter. EVGA is one of the more established video card companies out there at this point, and my own experience with them in the past is that they have stood by their products in case of trouble and are fast to honor their rebates. In fact, I got a rebate offer with this very card, and after filling out the information on their website, the company offers to expedite the rebate process for a nominal ($2) fee, so you get your money back in week or so instead of half a year. How great is that?
- Nvidia driver support. You download one driver file from nvidia and that's it. The installation is automated and painless, and the drivers support a wide range of Nvidia products. There's no drama. Compare and contrast with ATI's infamously poor driver support, where the company will often sneakily disable features on older cards that were working fine with the older drivers, or will inadvertently introduce or even reintroduce bugs serious enough to crash your computer. My subjective opinion is that their driver support has matured and gotten a little better, but it's still just plain bad. Every time ATI releases a new set of Catalyst drivers, it's like a war crime. As somebody with a junk drawer filled with a decade's worth of poorly-supported ATI TV tuners and graphics cards, it was definitely a headache I wanted to avoid this time around. If you're getting tired of all the nonsense and are taking 5xxx-series ATI cards off the table as a viable option for an HTPC build, that leaves you with just one good, affordable alternative, and it's this card.
CONS:
- The card is meant to have a small footprint, and occupy one PCI-E slot without hogging all the other slots on the motherboard. But in my setup, the heatsink fan on the video card is perilously close (1/4") to a neighboring PCI slot, which itself has a TV tuner card in it. Yeah, everything physically fits in the case, but there could be some concerns with heat when you have two cards that close to each other. I installed a small intake fan to push more air into the PCI bay as a little insurance.
- A minor gripe, but the box was a little light. No adapters, no driver CD, no nothing. It was just the card. I realize most customers are not going to use all that stuff, but throw us a bone here. Throw in an HDMI cable to sweeten the deal. Something. Anything.
I hate to end with the "CONS" because it gives the impression that there's something wrong with the card that should somehow factor into a buying decision. But the fact of the matter is there really is nothing wrong with this card at all. It's pretty much as good as it gets for new media PC builds. If you're assembling an HTPC, it should most certainly be on your list of components to buy.
Sapphire Radeon HD 5570
Product Description
Sapphire Radeon HD 5570 ATI Radeon HD 5500 Series graphics processors offer the most features and functionality in its class.1 With ATI Radeon HD 5500 Series graphics processors you get a multi-purpose graphics solution for maximum versatility.
This review is from: Sapphire Radeon HD 5570 - 1 GB DDR3 HDMI/DVI-I/VGA PCI-Express Graphics Card 100293L (Personal Computers)
Purchased this video card to replace an existing one without HDMI support. I first installed this when I had Windows XP SP3. It installed very easily and everything worked without a hitch. I then decided to upgrade to Windows 7. Again everything went extremily well. It both cases Windows recognized the card and the drivers installed easily. It is amazing how much better everything looks on my HDMI monitor. I am running a triple monitor system off of this card (one in each port) and everything works great. It is a very quite card - I cannot hear the fan outside the case.
At this point I would highly recommend this card. This review is being written about two months after installation (May 10, 2010). There haven't been any problems or issues. If anything comes up within another 6 months, I will report back - otherwise assume everything is still working fine.
EVGA GeForce GTX 550 Ti 2048 MB GDDR5
Product Description
EVGA GeForce GTX 550 Ti 2048 MB GDDR5 Introducing the latest entry in the GeForce GTX 500 series product lineup: the EVGA GeForce GTX 550 Ti. Get your PC ready to dominate this year's blockbuster game titles like Crysis 2 and Duke Nukem Forever. And with up to 6x the performance of previous generations graphics, you know you are well armed for the future. Performance is not the end of the story though; full DirectX 11 done right that blows away the competition, NVIDIA 3D Vision, NVIDIA Surround Gaming, NVIDIA PhysX and award winning EVGA support give you the edge on your opponents and peace of mind on your hardware. Get serious performance today with the EVGA GeForce GTX 550 Ti.Specifications include the GTX 550 Ti (951 MHz core clock) chipset, 2048MB of 0.5ns GDDR5 memory with a 4356 MHz memory clock, 192 bit memory interface, 1903 MHz shader clock, 104.5 GB/sec memory bandwidth, 30.4 GT/s texture fill rate, 192 CUDA cores and PCI Express 2.0 compatibility. Additional features include Microsoft DirectX 11 Support, NVIDIA PhysX and NVIDIA PureVideo HD Technologies, NVIDIA 2-way SLI readiness, NVIDIA 3D Vision Surround and NVIDIA Surround readiness, NVIDIA CUDA Technology with CUDA C/C++, DirectCompute 5.0 and OpenCL support, PCI-Express 2.0 support and OpenGL 4.1 support. Connections are 1 Mini-HDMI 1.4a connector and 2 Dual-Link DVI-I HDCP capable connectors. Package includes the EVGA Driver/software disc with EVGA Precision Tuning utility, 1 DVI to VGA adapter, 1 6-pin PCI-E power cable and a limited 3 Year warranty if registered within 30 days at evga .
This review is from: EVGA GeForce GTX 550 Ti 2048 MB GDDR5 PCI Express 2.0 2DVI/Mini-HDMI SLI Ready Graphics Card, 02G-P3-1559-KR (Personal Computers)
Upgraded to this card about a week ago. Mostly, it's a great card that can play most of your games at max settings without any issues at all. However, this card is not the top of the line available right now. For extremely graphically intense games, you might have to settle for moderate settings. The card will still handle those games just fine, but if you don't want to sacrifice game performance you will probably have to keep the settings at a reasonable level. Overall, a great card for the price. Recommended for people on a budget that still wants a solid card. Cheaper cards just can't handle the load this card can and to get noticeably better performance over this one, you'd have to drop at least another hundred or more.
That being said, I did have a handful of issues but they seem to have cleared up. These are the reasons the card did not get 5 stars. First of all, when playing the game League of Legends (which is not graphically intense at all) I had an issue where my screen froze and at one point even went black for a few seconds. This occurrence only happened once and has since seemingly have been fixed. Second, when playing Portal 2, I had an instance where when there was a lot of gel flowing on the screen, I would get minor flickering. There was only 1 part in the entire game this was apparent that had enough flowing gel to cause the issue. Third, and this was the worst scenario, my screen would randomly go black and my computer would freeze when simply browsing the internet, not even in a game or anything. This happened a total of 4 times, so it wasn't a simple fluke.
Like I said, I believe this issues have been alleviated since they last happened. I uninstalled the drivers, ran a driver sweeper to clean out all previously installed drivers believing there may have been a conflict from something left behind from my old ATI card, did a clean install of the Nvidia drivers and so far so good. I also contacted EVGA's customer support and, to my dismay, was told that there are sometimes conflicting errors in regards to a Motherboard's onboard sound and the built in sound for the video card. Basically, I was told that I may have to go into Device Manager and manually disable the video card sound to keep it from conflicting. Doing this would prevent me from using the HDMI out on the video card, which is one of the selling points for me on the card. However, I currently have both the motherboard and the video card sound enabled and for the past couple of days, everything has been stable.
With so many issues, even 4 stars is a gift. However, in spite of the mishaps that occurred, this card deserves a good rating. It does the job well and has an extremely reasonable price even before the rebate. As long as no further issues crop up, then I believe this card is a bargain. Time will tell and if necessary, I'll update or post another review.
HIS Radeon HD 6950 IceQ X Turbo 2GB
Product Description
HIS Radeon HD 6950 IceQ X Turbo 2GB From the Manufacturer ATI Radeon HD 6950 Key Features, GDDR5 memory interface, PCI Express 2.1 x16 bus interface, "Eye-Definition" graphics, AMD Eyefinity multi-display technology, AMD EyeSpeed visual acceleration, AMD HD3D technology, AMD CrossFireX multi-GPU technology, Cutting-edge integrated display support, Integrated HD audio controller, AMD PowerPlay power management technology, AMD Catalyst graphics and HD video configuration software
This review is from: HIS Radeon HD 6950 IceQ X Turbo 2GB (256bit) GDDR5 2x Mini-DisplayPort HDMI 2x DVI (HDCP) PCIe X16 2.1 Video Card H695QNT2G2M (Personal Computers)
First off the box includes driver disc, crossfire bridge, vga adapter and case sticker and two molex to pci-express power adapters. It is a pci-e 2.1 but it will fit in a 2.0 slot which is were I am currently using it in. Installation was a breeze, card is a good size and I have included a picture of the card sitting on a standard sheet of copy paper. I used the HIS website for the most current drivers and was off and running without any problems on windows vista 64bit. The first thing I noticed was how much smoother my gameplay was on bad co. 2 and aliens vs predators on all high settings both being dx11 games I was pleasantly suprised running a resolution of 1920x1080 on 24" dell HD monitor with AA set at 4x and AF on 8 on bad co 2 I was getting frames as high as 108 and during heavy fight scenes 45 but averaging steady frames of 60 and above. Coming from a his 6850 I saw alot of improvement all around, this is the third HIS card I've owned and have yet to be dissapointed by them and would consider them my first choice in graphics cards especially there iceq models. The card puts out slightly less heat then my old 6850 but cools much better. My specs are as follow:
cpu amd phenom x4 965 stock settings of 3.4ghz
memory G.skill 8gb of ddr3 10666 timing 8-8-8-24
motherboard msi 880gm-e43
ultra x4 600w power supply
2 vertex 60gb ssd drives in raid 0
I ran a heaven benchmark an obtained a score of 817 with direct x11, shaders on high, tesselation normal, AF 4x, AA 4x, res 1920x1080 on full screen and my average fps 32.4 minimum 19.7 max 60.7 so all in all pretty impressed. This with my cpu at stock settings my goal is to overclock to 3.8ghz. I still plan on running a vantage mark 3d benchmark and will post update soon, I was just really eager to use this bad boy. I don't plan on overclocking this card as it come already factory overclocked at 840mhz vs the standard 800mhz core clock. It also boasts an impressive 2gb of ddr5 memory which should help in rendering very high resolution if you like gaming on large tv's.
As far as looks goes this thing is very sexy, I didn't think I would like the light blue or that it wouldn't match well with my case but it looks great! I have a side panel window and those massive heat pipes look awesome (NZXT M59 case if your wondering). I purchased this card in preperation of battlefield 3
there really was nothing wrong with my 6850 rather I was dissapointed in amd's card rebranding for the 6000 series cards so I just decided to go for the 6950 instead very happy with my choice. I will post an updated review if I encounter any issues with this card as it is still early on in my time of ownership.
-------UPDATE--------
10/10/11
This card is still going strong I recently have been playing the battlefield 3 beta which automatically set my settings to ultra high everything runs smooth frames around 60 and below on the caspian border with 64 players conquest as well as metro with LATEST drivers most of the stutter was from the beta version and glitches. My only concern is I haven't tested the eyefinity and some one posted some pictures here showing a setup were one of the mini display ports went out/failed, I would love to hear some comments. On a side note Battlefield 3 recommends a 6950 or a 560 from nvidia pretty beefy recommendations as this card is considered high end :O
Blackmagic Design Intensity Pro HDMI Editing Card
Product Description
Blackmagic Design Intensity Pro HDMI Editing Card The Blackmagic Design Intensity Pro HDMI Editing Card is an excellent choice for your digital and analog capture needs. The card fully supports NTSC, PAL and HD video via HDMI, component, composite or S-Video. It supports two channels of embedded, RCA or S/PDIF audio at television-standard sampling rates. The Intensity Pro supports 4:2:2 color sampling for superior chromakey performance. The card can work with both Windows and Macintosh computers, making it an excellent choice for your editing needs regardless of your operating platform.
This review is from: Blackmagic Design Intensity Pro HDMI Editing Card with PCI Express (Personal Computers)
Pros:
This card does what is says it can do and then went beyond the expectations of what I had initially expected. As someone who does Live game streaming on justin tv with my xbox 360 I wanted the best in quality and the Intensity Pro was the best choice. I stream in true 720p HD (1280x720) at 59.94 frames per second. I have a Hauppauge HD PVR as well but with the Intensity pro being built as a pci card for a pc you get a lot of options. Whether you use the card for live game captures and streaming like me or plan to use another device to capture it works well. The software that comes with the Intensity Pro is pretty easy to understand granted you read the instructions and know that the card when installed has a user CP that shows up in your computers control panel. The best thing to do when you get the card is make sure you get the latest drivers from the official Black magic Pro site, which can fix a lot of issues. I had no issues getting the audio or video to appear. You just have to make sure you have the correct settings for whatever the device you are using is compatible with. For example, the xbox 360 does not run on 60fps but rather 59.94 so the moment I switched that that option I got audio and video. While I do live game streaming this doesn't mean I simply use the card to stream. I use the software's capturing as well to test it out and when I played back the video the quality was great. I also went into my Adobe After Effects with the video file as well to confirm it is compatible as a video format for composting and video editing. Overall this card has been great so far and I couldn't be happier seeing my live stream on jtv in HD with no loss of quality, the Intensity Pro does its job well.
Cons:
Since this is an internal card it is not going to work well if you buy it for an older pc. The card can use a lot of cpu power if you don't have a computer that is up to par. Luckily I have a new custom built pc (Intel i7) so this is not an issue for me but if you do plan to get this make sure you have the system requirements to run it. One other issue with the intensity pro is not so much the card itself but the software. Even in the instructions they don't clearly let the user know that the Intensity Pro has a user cp where you can change a lot of options for the card settings. In a way, half of the settings for capturing are in the control panel and the other settings are in the Media Express program that you actually use to capture your video. It's not a huge con but it can be annoying having to use both panels to make sure settings are right depending on what you are capturing.
Other Thoughts:
Before I bought this card I saw a lot of reviews that flat out said the Intensity Pro does not work with any i7 computers. This is simply not true. I have an i7 960 and a LGA 1366 x58 i7 motherboard and this card had no compatibility issues whatsoever. You just have to make sure you set everything up correctly and also have the latest drivers. It's not that hard: install the card, update drivers, make sure your device settings are correct, and bam! you are capturing sweet HD.