> Ian Field <
gangprob...@ntlworld.com> wrote:
>> I'm trying to identify an AGP card that is fully enclosed in an
>> aluminium shell (with twin fans), there are no external markings
>> whatsoever - there's nothing that amounts to a model number with the
>> shell removed, but it has a large Nvidia FX chip under the main
>> heatsink.
>
> If it works, or if you think it works, install it in a motherboard with
> an AGP port, boot Linux, and run "lspci"; I am pretty sure that lspci
> knows about AGP cards as well. If the motherboard has onboard video,
> you can use that as the main display to avoid any driver issues with the
> unknown card.
>
> Some sample lspci output is available at
>
http://wiki.debian.org/HowToIdentifyADevice/PCI . Video cards tend to
> be labeled as "VGA compatible controller", no matter how advanced they
> are. If there is onboard video as well as the AGP card, you will see
> both video devices in the list.
>
> You can run Linux from a bootable live CD - you don't have to install
> it on the hard drive. I have used SystemRescueCD before and it should
> work well in this application. There is also Knoppix (for a full GUI
> environment) and many others.
>
>> Is there a sort of "rogues gallery" that I might pick it out from - a
>> bit like an identity parade?
>
> If you can post a picture somewhere and then ask in one of the
> comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.* groups, someone may be able to identify it.
Someone did.