Hey... how do you do that? I'm having the same problem on my new computer, and I thought I had to buy a whole new card, not just update the drivers...
It depends - if you have a really weak integrated graphics chipset instead of a video card, you might be stuck with such graphics. More often than not however all you need is a driver update. If you don't know what graphics card you have, (on Windows) point to the Start button and click Run. Type
dxdiag in the box and press return. In the new window, go to the Display tab, and read "Name" and "Manufacturer". "Name" is the name and model of your card, and "Manufacturer" is self-explanatory.
If you think you may not have the latest driver version for your card:
For NVidia, visit
www.nvidia.comFor ATI, visit
www.ati.comFor anything else, use
www.Google.com to find the correct manufacturer address.