Wednesday, September 1st 2010

SPARKLE Unveils GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards

SPARKLE Computer Co., Ltd., the professional VGA card manufacturer and supplier, today unveils the SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards, creating upgrade possibility for user's generic PC, providing 1080p HD video acceleration, DX10.1 gaming and premium Windows 7 experience for ordinary users.

With latest PCI Express technology, SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards use PCI Express x1 bus type, they can be added on the motherboard which have at least one PCI Express x1 slot as the second graphics card, providing multiple monitors supports for computer users and certain industries, in addition to industrial users, they also support the upgrading of Intel Pine Trail motherboard which has only one PCI Express x1 slot.
SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards are also suitable for HTPC which doesn't come with much expansion ability and no PCI Express 16x slot, they help HTPC to smoothly playback 1080p HD videos with 2nd PureVideo Technology from NVIDIA. SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards are also the best choices for budget gamers who want more 3D powerful weapons to replace onboard graphics but with only PCI Express x1 slot onboard.

Cooling System
Exquisitely made cooling fans which have high performance thermal compound ensures optimal thermal dissipation even after years of use.

Advanced Rendering Architecture
SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards use NVIDIA's next generation GT218/GT216/GT215 chip architecture. They can dynamically allocates 3D processing power to geometry, vertex, physics or pixel shading operations, delivering excellent gaming performance of prior generation GPUs. Thanks to technologies such as NVIDIA Lumenex Engine, SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards support DirectX 10.1, Shader Model 4.1, NVIDIA Quantum Effects Technology for physics computation and GigaThread Technology for extreme processing efficiency in advanced, next generation shader programs.

Gorgeous Graphics
Modern games and 3D applications demand more graphics performance than ever before and integrated graphics simply aren't good enough. SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards packs CUDA processing cores into a compact power efficient design delivering up to 37x the performance of integrated solutions! If you want to play popular games like World of Warcraft, Spore, Sims3, Left 4 Dead or Fallout 3, SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards are essential additions to your PC.

All-Solid-Capacitor Design
The capacitors are key factor of power supply on the system and it has great impact on system stability. At present, solid capacitors and electrolytic capacitors both store electricity and discharge it when needed. According to factual test, any operation under high frequency and temperature, solid capacitors are able to supply more stable current than electrolytic capacitors and strengthen longer lifespan. Solid capacitors contain zero risk of leaking or exploding. The SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards use all solid capacitor as a true factor of products quality.

Full-Scale HD output interface
SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards come with a full-scale HD output interface, which includes HDMI 1.3a, DVI and CRT interfaces.

HDMI 1.3a Support
Fully integrated support for HDMI 1.3a including xvYCC,Deep color and 7.1 digital surround sound.

Windows 7 Premium Windows 7 Experience
Graphics processing units (GPUs) are an essential element of today's PCs, enabling more visual and more interactive experiences. As leaders in visual computing and graphics cards market, NVIDIA and SPARKLE worked closely with Microsoft on the development of Windows 7 to ensure that SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards take full advantage of the great new features and functionality. If you use your PC to enhance photos, watch or edit videos, play games, or if you simply desire a fast and efficient graphical interface, SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards will surely delight your senses and offer a premium experience for Windows 7.

Fantastic Video
Get all the video processing power that your digital lifestyle requires. Clean up home video and post to Facebook with SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards. Convert your video and put it on your iPod in minutes instead of hours or make your DVDs look like HD. Does your PC have a CPU powerful enough to playback high definition Blu-Ray Movies? It doesn't matter, with 2nd Generation PureVideo HD decoder, SPARKLE GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards can playback any Blu-Ray Movie with any modern CPU.

NVIDIA PhysX
GeForce GPU support for NVIDIA PhysX technology, enabling a totally new class of physical gaming interaction for a more dynamic and realistic experience with GeForce.

NVIDIA CUDA Technology
CUDA technology unlocks the power of the GPU's processor cores to accelerate the most demanding system tasks such as video transcoding delivering up to 7x performance over traditional CPUs.

OpenGL 3.2 Optimization and Support
Ensures top‐notch compatibility and performance for OpenGL applications.

For more information, visit this page.
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18 Comments on SPARKLE Unveils GeForce 210/GT220/GT240 PCI Express x1 Graphics Cards

#1
afw
Would love to have a GT240 as physX card ... but low profile cards have heat issues AFAIK ... :( ...
Posted on Reply
#2
Yukikaze
These will probably cost an arm, a leg and a kidney. Although I would definitely like that PCIe x1 GT240 to try some whacky configurations with it... Like SLIing two of those on the PCIe x1 slots of a motherboard just to see how that works....
Posted on Reply
#3
erocker
*
afwWould love to have a GT240 as physX card ... but low profile cards have heat issues AFAIK ... :( ...
That card wouldn't have heat issues. PhysX won't max it out either way. :)
Posted on Reply
#4
HillBeast
These would be good as PhysX cards because they use a single PCI-e x1 slot, but if you're wanting an actual card, I'm willing to bet these would be more expensive than the PCI-e x16 models because they are a novelty.

Good idea anyways. Saves people breaking their PCI-e slots to get a PhysX card in their system when all they ahve left over is a PCI-e x1.

EDIT: Just looking through some more of the marketing crap, are they seriously marketing CUDA on these things as if no other NVIDIA card has it? Oh right, the GeForce 8400GS, 8500GT, 8600GT 8800GT, 8800GTX, 8800GTS, 8800 Ultra, 9400, 9500, 9600, 9800, GTX 260, 275, 280, 285, 295, 460, 465, 470, 480 and the various new onboard nForce chips don't have it do they.

Kind of a redundant marketing campaign.
Posted on Reply
#5
(FIH) The Don
damn nice, then i can add a couple of 240s as folders in the x1 slots, sweet
Posted on Reply
#6
Drone
That Sparkle looks really nice. If it's really gonna deliver what it's promised then I'm so buying this!
Posted on Reply
#7
GENTLEMEN
The idea of having a pair of those in SLI is pretty confusing. More performance, but bottlenecked by x1? But for physx, this looks like a good idea.
Posted on Reply
#8
Yukikaze
GENTLEMENThe idea of having a pair of those in SLI is pretty confusing. More performance, but bottlenecked by x1? But for physx, this looks like a good idea.
Oh, it isn't a serious configuration. I am just really intrigued by trying something like that.
Posted on Reply
#9
GENTLEMEN
Driver hacks or something might actually make it possible. But it WILL be cheaper (and have more performance) to just get a better card in the first place.
Posted on Reply
#10
Yukikaze
GENTLEMENDriver hacks or something might actually make it possible. But it WILL be cheaper (and have more performance) to just get a better card in the first place.
I am pretty sure it'll work on any SLI capable board, which will of course beg the question why would someone do something this silly on that board (which will have two PCIe x16 slots anyway). I am just interested in the academic side of that: What the performance will be like.
Posted on Reply
#11
HossHuge
Even though they are made either here (Taiwan) or in China, They don't sell PCI x1 or PCI cards in Taiwan....:ohwell:
Posted on Reply
#12
wolf
Performance Enthusiast
this is friggen awesome, I've been waiting for something decent in the way of pci-e 1x cards for a while now, a GT240 sounds easily beefy enough.
Posted on Reply
#13
Richieb0y
hey is this a good PhysX card i am looking for one it have to go along my ati 4890
PM me thx
Posted on Reply
#15
Unregistered
I bought a EVGA GeForce 210 the other day and it didn't support Phsyx i was so disappointed.
#16
_JP_
TaskforceI bought a EVGA GeForce 210 the other day and it didn't support Phsyx i was so disappointed.
Not that I want to question your choice, but what did you expect?
Most people here are running 8800, 9800, 9600, GTS 240/250 for PhysX, the GTS 210 is way to weak and too cheap to be moderately advanced and support such features.
Posted on Reply
#17
wolf
Performance Enthusiast
TaskforceI bought a EVGA GeForce 210 the other day and it didn't support Phsyx i was so disappointed.
its a pity alright, it needs to have a minimum number of CUDA cores to qualify, having said that, with only 16 CUDA cores you wont get good PhysX performance.
Posted on Reply
#18
TIGR
I don't think you're going to be able to SLI these. Firstly because it appears that there are no connectors for SLI bridges (and even with these low-powered cards, SLI would get bottlenecked with only x1 bandwidth and no bridge), and secondly because PCI Express x1 and x16 slots are typically controlled/configured differently—x1 slots aren't intended for graphics applications and thus aren't configured for SLI, even on motherboards with SLI functionality on the x16 slots. If anyone has more in-depth info on that, correct me if I'm wrong.

If you really want to use an x1 slot for something like folding, you can simply cut through one end of the x1 slot so that an x16 card will plug into it (or use an open-ended/modified riser if you're more comfortable with that).
Posted on Reply
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