It is designed for heavy DTR laptops and it is compareable with a current 8600M GT (performance-wise). It was replaced by the GeForce Go 7900 GS. It is a very fast graphic card and allows good gaming performance. NVIDIA Digital Vibrance Control (DVC) 3.NVIDIA GeForce Go 7800 is the small sister (less pipelines, low clocked) of the 7800 GTX video cards for notebooks.
Full floating point support throughout entire pipeline.Full OpenGL support, including OpenGL 2.0.Complete DirectX support, including the latest version of Microsoft DirectX 9.0 Shader Model 3.0.
While the NX7300GS TD256E may not sport the same number of pixel shader processors or vertex shaders as a 7900 series product, it does have essentially the same feature set, including support for Shader Model 3.0 and PureVideo. Today we're going to look at MSI's GeForce NX7300GS TD256E which features TurboCache technology.
TurboCache allocates system memory to the video card by way of the PCI Express interface, and while it's certainly not as desirable as having copious amounts of high-speed on-board RAM, it is a useful way of adding more effective total frame buffer memory to an entry-level card, while also keeping prices down. I just read a post by someone on that said that after the 7300GT Firmware update, the amount of RAM being used is has shrunk by almost 50 of what it is normally I noticed that my RAM usage on a fresh install is about 500MB on my Mac Pro but, only about 250MB on the G5 I use.
With their previous GPU architecture, Nvidia introduced TurboCache technology, at first with their GeForce 6200 card. Nvidia aims to help out the multitude of people stuck in that exact situation.
So what do you do? What can you do if you don't have enough cash for a graphics powerhouse, but can't stand to deal with the limitations of most integrated video solutions? Of course, you could always settle for on-board video and save some money, right? Well, if you plan on playing any games or watching HD videos without dropping frames, probably not. As great as it is using high resolutions with anti-aliasing and anisotropic filtering on a 20" LCD is, it's simply not an affordable option for most of us. That is unless you don't have a ton of coin to throw down for a high end card. With most of the fuss revolving around video cards such as Nvidia's 7900 series and ATI's X1900 series these days, it's easy to overlook entry-level offerings like the GeForce 7300.