2 780s 6GB will do fine as well...
Also, next gen gpu launches? You clearly have not been around for.. gtx 8800x, gtx 280x...
GTX 780 Ti cant play all games at 60fps 1080P... Let alone gtx 770...
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I would agree, at low settings a pair of 780's will probably do just fine. Very similar to the titans, at a more reasonable price.
You are absolutely right about some GPU launches being incredibly successful, I remember the 8800GTX, I had one =)
And that just might happen again, but it's less likely than a ~20% improvement.
Yep, and that is skirting my point. Thanks for acknowledging that.
Not sure what these years you refer to are, but my monitor seems to be from 2010, and it's 1200p. Ancient CCFL glory.
(HP ZR24w if you wanna check)
This is where I wonder if you are serious or not, while it's true my rig certainly can't run all new games at 60fps constant at max settings. It seems capable at medium to high at the given resolution, with rare drops below 60fps.
1080p still is the "standard", and the most popular resolution in the world, on most platforms.
According to Steam statistics, it's the most abundant amongst gamers as well.
What does according gpu's mean?
Time will tell how fast 4k catches on, Steam statistics will keep an eye on that. But I am sure you can consider it popular/normal within two years time.
Uncertain about any singular date regarding 1080p, but similar pixel densities have been around with CRT for a long time.
An old and a bit interesting example:
http://www.geek.com/games/john-carma...-1995-1422971/
Well, it's not that I don't need max settings, it's simply happens to be a decent trade with frame rate and graphic quality, without having to spend an arm and a leg. And to be fair, two 780Sli@4k while mostly achieving 60fps< would probably put you very close to "low" in the graphics settings, and while the aliasing properties would be excellent @4k, it's not going to "look as good"; figuratively speaking of course.
Talk about upcoming video cards all you want, smooth gaming at high settings on 4k or 5k is still a pipedream for the majority of enthusiasts never mind gamers in general. The video card performance is just not really there yet unless you spend a ludicrous amount of money and are willing to spend that amount every GPU refresh to keep up with more demanding, newer titles. And there's not that many people willing to throw that sort of money at gaming.
In a few years when 4k displays are cheaper and you maybe don't need 2+ highest end cards to get a playable experience then maybe 4k will catch on with enough gamers then. Until then 4k gaming is going to be a very niche thing.
Yep, 4 year old gk 110 gpus no longer... http://cdn.imghack.se/images/3074c14...d6484a94bd.png :yepp:
According to Nvidia Game 24 Gaming moment webpage, the final date of updates is 17 September. Followed by an announcement I am expecting the announcement on 17-18th September.
Is not only gaming, with a 5K display you can use that quality for productivity and do pixel perfect gaming at 1440p without reescaling, and 1440P is a res that can be handled with some gpus.
If the panel is great like the 2713H, 60 hz at 5k, 120hz at 1440p I'll take a 5k display once they cost about 1500
after having my :banana::banana::banana::banana:ty experiences with my AOC 4K display, i don't think i will upgrade any monitors before i can get 30" borderless 4K+ OLEDs ... or maybe go with some insane 3-5 projector setup
Does the 4K resolution is more standard ? or not ?.
I think you're referring to this little puppy....
Red Ray
I think it is more of a standard than 5k in media production and in cinema, yes.
Having said that more media producers are finding a value (considering the cost) in shooting in higher resolutions than the final one since you have more options in post-production. You can shoot 4k even if your target is 1080p, because you then get options to zoom in or reframe shots in post-production which would have been a "problem" with a 1080 shot frame. So I'm sure that as prices come down we'll see more content acquired or created at way above 4k, but the distribution standard is likely going to be lower than that (I'm betting 4k).
Hopefully they?ll get their flagship monitors working right this time. Still trying to get a good replacement for my 3014.
tell me of any other Laser projector you know that runs at 4k res out there on the market for under $10k.... if it ever sees the light of day.
http://saveatheater.com/wordpress/wp...-projector.jpg
in case someone still thinks the 4K AOC is a good deal
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Psrvz3qFsmA
Laser projectors look really promising for several reasons, why the negative attitude? It's just too early to pass such judgment on it until we see this market mature out of it's infancy, but the LG Hecto laser does not seem too bad.
Could not find any proper reviews unfortunately, but this guy has some experience with it:
http://www.dtvforum.info/index.php/t...-screen/page-2
Decent projectors are really expensive btw, although they do drop look a stone in value... luckily. But you really need a "batcave" to grasp the experience and not to mention the "worry" with the lamp.
You can get hold of some nackered second-hand ones, but you better be able to use a soldering iron:
http://kirkedam.mine.nu/kwk/Bilder%2...207D/Fixer.jpg
Kuroikenshi, you initiated this very strangely with Eventaur and Iconyu... what are you really trying to get across?
lol first post in almost a year, just making small talk.
my cinematographer told me about red ray when it was initially going to be a laser projector.
now its a player and the 4k projector is nowhere to be seen.
anything else anyone might have inferred about what I said are just out of character and intent.
talk was 5k monitors and so I thought....4k projectors.
done
So the new iMac has a better display than this, 5k SST display and a full PC for $2499. This is just the display, worse than the one in the iMac (MST) and costs the same at $2499...nice
Yes 4k has 2 standards thanks to consumer electronics and the 16:9 TV craze.
UHD 4k 3840 x 2160 - Ultra High Defintion for TVs
DCI 4K 4096 x 2160 (native 4k) - Digital Cinema Initiatve's 4k standard
5k has not been standardized yet. Just individual companies interpretation of what it will be. (doesn't mean its wrong)