Thanks for the correction video. Though, I think your original video was good. It answered the question given to you. I was just being picky on the terminology you used. :-) By the way if your CPU does have integrated graphics, then you can often use that in conjunction with your dedicated graphics card (sometimes you need to explicitly enable it in the BIOS, as it may be disabled by default if a dedicated card is present). This would give you 5 monitor outputs. Though you still should connect your 3D views to the dedicated GPU.
Thanks for the correction video. Though, I think your original video was good. It answered the question given to you. I was just being picky on the terminology you used. :-)
By the way if your CPU does have integrated graphics, then you can often use that in conjunction with your dedicated graphics card (sometimes you need to explicitly enable it in the BIOS, as it may be disabled by default if a dedicated card is present). This would give you 5 monitor outputs. Though you still should connect your 3D views to the dedicated GPU.