no
No, but hopefully when the gtx 300 series come out it will.
If you mean Geforce GT520, then yes the packaging claims it does.
Directx 11 can be downloaded from microsoft.com. It will be available on the Microsoft download center. if you are using Windows it can be downloaded for free here www.tomsguide.com/us/download/DirectX,0301-2158.html
DirectX 11 can be downloaded onto a computer by visiting the download site directly. Just be sure to double check that no malware is to be included in the download.
no
It sure does! :)
No, but hopefully when the gtx 300 series come out it will.
Not exactly. It doesn't support 11 directly, but 11 is backwards compatible with directx 10 (which the card originally came out with). So, it'll work with directx 11, just won't use the features only on that and not on 10
If you mean Geforce GT520, then yes the packaging claims it does.
no all the ge force 9 and 10 series dont support direct x 11 they started supporting it from 2010 (ge force 400 series and up)
DirectX 10.1 supports all DirectX 10.0 card, including the GMA X3100. However, DX 10.1 introduces new features that are not supported in the GMA X3100. Even NVIDIA hasn't released a card that uses 10.1 features yet.
No, the only graphics cards available as of 2/1/10 that support DirectX11 are the Radeon 5000 series, Nvidia is currently developing their DirectX11 GPU, Fermion.
DirectX is not about your operating system but it's about video card you have. Video cards available today support DirectX 11 and as far as you have drivers for such video card your will support DirectX. Make sure that you update DirectX.
Yes, they support direct x 11 and below as of 2014
No. Microsoft has not made DirectX 11 or DirectX 10 available for Windows XP, and has no plans to do so, as it is scheduled to be discontinued. Programs that claim to do this are either malware or are buggy and likely to crash your computer.
DirectX 9.0c is not available for Windows 7; to actually install DirectX 9.0c, you would have to downgrade to Windows XP (any edition). In order to play games which require DirectX 9.0c without downgrading your installation of Windows, you must upgrade to DirectX 10.1 or later. DirectX 10.0 (initially included in Windows 7) did not include support for DirectX 9.0c, a decision that Microsoft ultimately repealed when DirectX 10.1 was released.