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Re: Prepard3D v4

Posted: 26 May 2017, 14:17
by DaveG
I don't see any reason why they wouldn't work but I'll have to wait and see.

Re: Prepard3D v4

Posted: 26 May 2017, 14:22
by TSR2
Have they published the hardware requirements yet. I've had a quick (read very quick look) and cant see them.

Re: Prepard3D v4

Posted: 26 May 2017, 15:02
by DaveG
Haven't seen any yet.

Re: Prepard3D v4

Posted: 26 May 2017, 17:34
by Rick Piper
I bought a second Hand 970 too

works a treat :thumbsup:

Re: Prepard3D v4

Posted: 26 May 2017, 21:27
by DaveG

Re: Prepard3D v4

Posted: 26 May 2017, 23:52
by TSR2
Cheers chaps, I found a page identical to that one, but it didn't have v4 on it 😀

Re: Prepard3D v4

Posted: 28 May 2017, 20:50
by simondix
I have a Nvidia 770GTX card would that be up to the job?

Re: Prepard3D v4

Posted: 29 May 2017, 00:07
by TSR2
I'm pretty sure that's the card I have Simon (can't recall as I'm not at home atm) but if its 2GB it won't cut the mustard. 😐

Re: Prepard3D v4

Posted: 29 May 2017, 07:13
by Vancouver
I just had to :-

What is the origin of the phrase "doesn't cut the mustard"?
WHEN MUSTARD was one of the main crops in East Anglia, it was cut by hand with scythes, in the same way as corn. The crop could grow up to six feet high and this was very arduous work, requiring extremely sharp tools. When blunt they "would not cut the mustard". All this and everything else you could ever want to know about mustard can be found at the Mustard Museum in Norwich.
Phil Pegum, Stretton, Cheshire ([email protected])
THE MORRIS Dictionary of Word & Phrase Origins (Harper Collins - 1988), relates the phrase to an earlier expression - "the proper mustard", meaning "the genuine article". Around the turn of the century, "to cut the mustard" meant to be "of high quality", as when O. Henry said of a pretty girl that "she cut the mustard all right". It is probably mere salaciousness which had me hunting through various lexicographical tomes in search of a connection, however tenuous, with the list of words cited by Jonathon Green in Slang Through the Ages (NTC, 1997), a list which included mustard-and-cress, lawn, grass, lawn, stubble and, most enduringly, bush.
Eoin C. Bairiad Dublin, Ireland ([email protected])


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Re: Prepard3D v4

Posted: 30 May 2017, 19:29
by DaveG
Downloading... :cpu: :excited: