![]() It was essentially a GeForce 2MX with the TV Tuner / Video-In-Video-Out additions. I owned an nVidia "Personal Cinema" version back when they were calling it that. I've never had a single bit of trouble with any nVidia card or driver, and I've gone through 5 iterations of GeForce cards on top of the TNT2 now. I've also used nVidia cards since the TNT2, and the drivers have *always* been great. I've since switched to stand-alone generic PCI tuner cards, which work much better, and don't get in the way of upgrading my main AGP or PCI-express video card when I need to play newer 3D games. The worst of it is, you can't upgrade to a better 3D card without re-buying the TV tuner features again and again, since if you use them as a secondary card (PCI versions) the TV features don't work! I tend to upgrade my video card and CPU a lot more often than I need to upgrade me TV-in ability. I also have an original Rage II+ and a Rage 128Pro All-in-Wonder, and don't care for any of them. When you are using them on the right OS and with the newest drivers, they still tend to crash quite a bit, even the new Radeon All-in-Wonders under XP are quite unreliable. Forget watching TV unless you want to downgrade to Windows ME or lower! The card wasn't even that old when Windows 2000 came out either. The first All-in-Wonder was never supported under Windows 2000 or higher as anything other then a basic video card. ![]() ![]() I've owned a few All-in-Wonders and I can say first-hand that support is horrible. ![]()
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