I recently read this answer on Gaming.SE, which made me realize that I actually have no idea how to tell which graphics card I have in my PC. Where can I find this information?
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Use the DirectX diagnostic tool.
This works on any version of Windows with DirectX, XP, Vista, 7, whatever. |
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All the specified methods are fine as long as you have graphic card drivers installed. Here's what to do if you don't: In Device Manager, right click the Unknown Device (that you assume is the graphics card), select properties and go to Details tab. Select Hardware IDs from the Property drop list. Right-click and copy any of the values and paste it on http://devid.info/en/ |
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Use a tool like GPU-z
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Wow, great answers -- and I have a fourth way! Click the start menu (or press the Windows key) and type "Device Manager", then launch Device Manager. If you're a command line kind of person execute From here expand Display adapters to see what kind of video card you have.
You can right click the display adapter and select properties to see even more detail. |
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The existing answers are all for Windows. In Linux you can use lshw to get information on pretty much any piece of hardware in the PC.
Alternatively,
So in this case, the graphics card is an nVidia GeForce 8400 GS. |
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On Mac OS X: First click on the Apple in the topbar.
Click "About this Mac".
Then, click on "more info".
There is an entry there for your graphics information.
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For a broad set of hardware that goes detailed: Start > System Information > Components > Display:
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If you want to know and there aren't any drivers installed here is a nifty way of doing it:
EDIT: I realize that you may not have debug.exe if you run windows 7. If you get "IB M VGA Compatible BIOS." you can continue through the memory with "d" (enter, no quotes) where it may show a string like "Nvidia XXXXX" or ATI "XXXXX". |
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