NVIDIA GeForce 210 is a graphics processor. This product is part of the GeForce series and is available from NVIDIA. The detected vendor ID for the GeForce 210 is 0x1002 and the product IDs include 0x796e, 0x4758. The NVIDIA GeForce 210 has been tested via the Phoronix Test Suite in the configurations listed below.
The NVIDIA GeForce 210 product can be found for approximately $33 USD with an average price of $39 USD. Shop on: Amazon.com - NewEgg.com.
mikey-openarena - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium D 2.80GHz, GeForce 210, Gigabyte . G41M-ES2L
mikey-render-bench - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium D 2.80GHz, GeForce 210, Gigabyte . G41M-ES2L
qgears2-xrender - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium D 2.80GHz, GeForce 210, Gigabyte . G41M-ES2L
gears-opengl - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium D 2.80GHz, GeForce 210, Gigabyte . G41M-ES2L
gtkperf-test - Tests on Fedora 15, Intel Core i7-2600K, GeForce GTX 560 Ti, ASUS P8P67 LE, Intel Pentium D 2.80GHz, GeForce 210, Gigabyte . G41M-ES2L
el1352 - Tests on MandrivaLinux 2010.2, Fedora 15, AMD Athlon II X2 220, GeForce 210, eMachines EL1352, Intel Celeron 2.40GHz, Gallium 0.4 on ATI RV350
qlg2a - Tests on MandrivaLinux 2010.2, AMD Athlon II X2 220, GeForce 210, eMachines EL1352
el1352 - Tests on MandrivaLinux 2010.2, AMD Athlon II X2 220, GeForce 210, eMachines EL1352
newvideo - Tests on Ubuntu 10.10, Intel Pentium Dual E2140, GeForce 210, ASUS P5LD2-X
suite-rit+real-it-7-ws-2+2011-05-11+23-53-40+build-apache - Tests on Ubuntu 10.04, Pentium E6500, GeForce 210, Gigabyte P43-ES3G
test2 - Tests on Ubuntu 10.10, AMD Phenom II X4 B50, GeForce 210, ASUS M4N75TD
test1 - Tests on Ubuntu 10.10, AMD Phenom II X4 B50, GeForce 210, ASUS M4N75TD
p7zip test - Tests on Ubuntu 10.10, AMD Athlon II X4 640, GeForce 210, ASUS M4N68T-M-V2
Compile Kernel - Tests on Ubuntu 10.10, AMD Athlon II X4 640, GeForce 210, ASUS M4N68T-M-V2
A New NVIDIA Linux Binary Driver Released: NVIDIA has released the updated 295.53 binary Linux display graphics driver for GeForce and Quadro hardware...
NVIDIA 295.49 Fixes Linux Performance Regression: While NVIDIA this week put out their first 302.xx series beta Linux graphics driver, yesterday they also released the 295.49 stable Linux driver. This update does fix the 295.40 performance regression that affected some users in April...
Running The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680 On An Open-Source Driver: Thanks to clean-room reverse-engineering, it is already possible to run the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680 "Kepler" graphics card on a fully open-source graphics driver complete with OpenGL acceleration. Here are the first benchmarks of this work-in-progress, community-created open-source GeForce 600 series graphics driver.
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 550 Ti: For those Linux gamers and other desktop users currently looking for a new mid-range (sub-$150 USD) graphics card, up for review today is a NVIDIA GeForce GTX 550 Ti. The GF116 Fermi graphics processor for the GTX 550 Ti has 192 CUDA cores, 900MHz core clock, 24 ROPs, 32 texture units, a 192-bit memory bus, and this EVGA-branded graphics card is paired with 1GB of GDDR5 video memory.
NVIDIA GeForce GT 520: Up for review today is a low-end NVIDIA Fermi graphics card, the GeForce GT 520. The low-end graphics processor it uses, the GF119, was released back in April. The graphics card only has 48 Stream processors and uses DDR3 memory with a 64-bit bus, except the cost on this creation is just around $60 USD.
NVIDIA Does An Official 275.xx Linux Driver Blob: NVIDIA has officially introduced their 275.xx Linux driver series with the stable release of the 275.09.07 binary driver this morning...
NVIDIA Pre-Releases A New Linux Driver: The NVIDIA crew working on their proprietary Linux driver have just pre-released a new build, NVIDIA 270.41.03. This Linux driver update mainly adds support for a number of new GeForce / Quadro GPUs...
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 460 On Linux: NVIDIA formally introduced the GeForce 400 "Fermi" graphics card series in late March when rolling out the GeForce GTX 470 and 480. This launch was followed by the GeForce GTX 465 availability in late May and then in the middle of July there was the launch of the GeForce GTX 460 768MB and GeForce GTX 460 1024MB graphics cards.
ECS NVIDIA GeForce GT 240 512MB: A month after NVIDIA launched the GeForce GT 220 graphics card they rolled out the GeForce GT 240, to further fill the performance void between the GT216-based GT 220 and the GeForce GTS 250 that had been around since March. The $100 GeForce GT 240 has received some praise for its low-power consumption while delivering a decent level of performance for being a mid-range graphics card, but of course, those reviews have been when tested under Microsoft Windows.
NVIDIA GeForce GT 220: Days prior to AMD's release of the ATI Radeon HD 5750 and Radeon HD 5770 graphics cards, NVIDIA released their GeForce G 210 and GeForce GT 220 graphics cards. Both of these NVIDIA graphics cards are for low-end desktop systems, but part of what makes them interesting is that they are the first NVIDIA GPUs built upon a TSMC 40nm process.
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 280M: After launching the GeForce 200 series last year, NVIDIA unveiled the GeForce GTX 260M and 280M GPUs for notebook computers earlier this year. The GeForce GTX 280M is currently NVIDIA's fastest notebook GPU, even though it is derived from the GeForce 9800GTX+ core rather than the GTX 280 desktop variant.
NVIDIA 180.51 Display Driver Released: NVIDIA has now managed to make it nearly two weeks before issuing a new Linux driver update. The NVIDIA 185.19 Beta is still the latest in the 185.xx series, but NVIDIA has provided a pre-release of the 180.51 driver...
motherboards.org: These are not gaming cards that is the first thing to get out of the way. If you are looking for a fast video card I would suggest looking elsewhere as these cards do not have the performance to run the latest and greatest games without some sacrifice in playability resolution or setting.