Categories:
-
3d 96 articles
-
animations 16 articles
-
architecture 47 articles
-
blender 98 articles
-
bédé 19 articles
-
techdrawing 24 articles
-
freecad 189 articles
-
gaming 1 articles
-
idsampa 8 articles
-
inthepress 8 articles
-
linux 57 articles
-
music 1 articles
-
nativeifc 30 articles
-
opensource 266 articles
-
orange 4 articles
-
photo 16 articles
-
projects 35 articles
-
receitas 176 articles
-
saopaulo 18 articles
-
sketches 163 articles
-
talks 25 articles
-
techdrawing 24 articles
-
textes 7 articles
-
trilhas 3 articles
-
urbanoids 1 articles
-
video 47 articles
-
webdesign 7 articles
-
works 151 articles
Archives:
-
2007 22 articles
-
2008 32 articles
-
2009 66 articles
-
2010 74 articles
-
2011 74 articles
-
2012 47 articles
-
2013 31 articles
-
2014 38 articles
-
2015 28 articles
-
2016 36 articles
-
2017 41 articles
-
2018 46 articles
-
2019 59 articles
-
2020 18 articles
-
2021 20 articles
-
2022 7 articles
-
2023 25 articles
-
2024 14 articles
Hi Gudeta,
Hi Gudeta, I have the same core2duo 1.8Ghz here on mine, and it does the job perfectly.
According to this site (It's a good site, I always look there when checking for a graphic board) the Quadro NVS 110M is not the best you can buy (it appears in class 4, I always try to find one at least in class 3), but honestly you don't absolutely NEED the most powerful graphic card. The only thing really important is the processor. A good graphic card simply gives you more "comfort" because the display of the 3D views goes faster and smoother.
When working with blender or archicad, what you really need is good processing power, because when you render with blender it's 100% processor work, no graphic card involved, and when working with archicad you need to process complex data much more than displaying it faster on screen. For 2D image work I think it doesn't matter at all, all GPUs can do that perfectly. So I wouldn't give it too much importance. This one should be more than sufficient.
The only thing that will not be too good with that notebook will be playing recent heavy 3D games
And in any case, any Nvidia chip is way better than the built-in intel gpus that come on todays cheap notebooks, specially if you use linux. The only bad point is indeed the RAM. Check that you can indeed upgrade it before buying (I have 4Gb here and it's very comfortable).
So I would say yes, go for it. The price is good, and you'll have a very good computer. Ah, and my first notebook was a toshiba and it lasted for 7 years!