Yes they do but only if you purchase a PCI version. Not very many are available and I don't think you can get any high end graphics cards in PCI format. You could get a PCI Radeon 9250 from the link below. The Matrox cards available aren't really gaming cards (although they do work - just that the prices do not reflect how good they are in terms of gaming) and are more geared to people doing AutoCAD and similar.
2007-05-05 09:11:25
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answer #1
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answered by wizardryuk 2
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I see your really puzzled! a PCIe slot is a pictures card slot...this is.. a PCIe x16 slot...when you're speaking a PCIe x1 slot then no that wont paintings performance smart, nor will it paintings in case you upload a PCI pictures card in a PCI slot. the mummy board would could be made for SLI or Crossfire and also you would favor to apply the "bridge" that contains the mummy board or video card. for finished performance. from 2, PCIe x16 slots. There are some video playing cards that are PCIe x1 and are commonly used to operate extra video demonstrate instruments now to not get performance benefit.
2016-12-05 09:51:15
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Yes, there are graphics card that fit in PCI slot. BUT brand new ones (old stock/old tech) are expensive, SLOW and will just be miserable in games. For non-gaming, just stick to your onboard graphics. For gaming, replace your motherboard w/ one that has 8X AGP slot or PCIe graphics slot. Then buy a good graphics card that your power supply can handle. More powerful cards need more powerful power supply.
2007-05-05 13:00:49
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answer #3
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answered by Karz 7
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You'd be better off buying new MOBO, RAM, Processor, and PCI-E graphics card than trying to buy a PCI card for that. We're almost in DX10 now and most games require DX9.0c to even run.
2007-05-05 10:46:23
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answer #4
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answered by DietQuack 1
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Only very old ones... I have a few at home, but I can't remember the names off-hand. Do an ebay search for "graphics card pci" and you should turn up a few...
2007-05-05 09:10:09
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answer #5
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answered by v_2tbrow 4
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I recommend going to the Crucial website, and letting their software scan your computer to see what graphics cards will work/fit
2007-05-05 09:10:35
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answer #6
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answered by Richard D 2
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I have a stack of them< try comp usa, you could look at old computers at the thrift store and find one !
2007-05-05 09:50:53
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answer #7
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answered by frank21142226 6
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