OCed 7600GT gave 6800Ultra some competition on lower resolutions.
6600GT creamed the 5900s.
GF Ti4200 killed the GF2MX
It happens a lot. :)
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Looks good, wont be released for ages though. :D
The ATI Radeon HD 4000 series is slated for late Q2. Information about the high-end RV770 has been leaking onto the web, from here and there, but the exact specifications has remained in the shadows. German hardware site Hartware.net has gotten their hands on what seems to be pretty authentic information. As far as we can tell, it looks believable and matches the rumors going around. We're still far away from the launch and the figures are subject to change. We also have some information on our own to share with you.
If you're into extreme single-core GPUs you may want to stop reading now. ATI's future is value-oriented and if you're longing for that 1 billion transistor megachip, you can stop doing it right now. ATI isn't into that. We should have told you this sooner. ATI is focusing on bang for the buck and if you want more performance you should get a second card, or get the card with two cores.
Considering the flexibility and scaling that CrossFireX offers, we're not exactly saddened by AMD's decision to steer ATI toward focusing more on the price/performance ratio than on raw performance. It is harder to write drivers for a multi-GPU, but when you make sure that you have a good foundation, such as CrossFireX, it might be worth the risk.
The information published elsewhere suggests that ATI will use GDDR5 to a great extent, which surprise us a little. On the other hand, ATI may know something about GDDR5 that we don't (we would be surprised otherwise). RV770 has GDDR5 support, but whether ATI will actually use it remains to be seen. GDDR4 with most of the high-end cards is a highly likely scenario. The frequencies suggested here are actually lower than what good GDDR4 chips are capable of.
Sounds good if its true, but I don't see any major core architectural change from 3000 series, just a lot more stream processors.
source, http://www.nordichardware.com/news,7356.html
I WANT A 4870x2!!!
ooooh should i wait for these i was just about to get a 3870x2
http://xs322.xs.to/xs322/07504/r700wip34.jpg
i think this is a photoshoped one but it look's great ^^
LOL @ madcho
but seriously, why not do a four core card with a PCI 2.1 bridge in the middle if you can keep the TDP down to sensible levels (sub 300W) 45nm and below should enable this within a 30cm VGA card. Hell if you run out of PCB real estate you can stack the cores.
Considering the drivers for the 3870 X2 arent even done... 8.3 might suprise you... I wouldnt count it out totally yet :)
This is on good authority of course that 8.3 will be something to remember ;) It might not be as well, but lets see what quadfire brings to the table :D
so 8.3 is great driver like that shoot em driver ?
I agree, 8.3 should be something big, bringing CFX support. But I think the basis of how Crossfire works with different games will remain the same (individual profiles, tweaks and such). And that's the problem. When they find the way to enable CF despite the game, configuration and OpenGL/DirectX9/DirectX10, then the X2 cards will literally ROCK. You know, when the game you're playing has a good CF profile, this card is a total beast.
Anyway I can't wait to test a pair of X2 :slobber: :up:
Show me a list of games. I'll tell you the problems you'll face if you purchase the X2 with all of them (if I've played them of course). I will say it again: in some parts of some games, the card totally rocks. The rest is a mixture of decent perfomance, image corruption, extremely low framerates and some other things.
On a side note: have you actually played with it, or you've only read ATI/NVIDIA biased reviews? :rolleyes:
In almost all of the benchmarks included within games (usually the included ones in the reviews) the card performs VERY well. You know why? Because is the part that is going to be reviewed, and is the part in which people like you will base his opinion of the card. You get my point? ;)
I think this is going to be a modular design. GFX cards are already multicore.
wait, wait, wait...
7600GT can compete at low res, but at high res, 68Ultra beats hell out the poor 76GT.
6600GT was not that far better than 5950Ultra. Yes, the 5xxx series was worst series from nVidia by large margin, but still, gap was very small from 6600GT and 5950Ultra.
Ti series was not mainstream. GF2MX was low end, GF2Ti middle end. GF4MX420/GF4MX440 SE was low end due to 64bit bus. GF4MX440 was middle end. GF3 Ti was high end, and comparing GF3Ti 500 and GF4 MX440, those was almost on par, even i believe that GF3Ti 500 was faster.
just a reminder: http://forum.beyond3d.com/showthread.php?t=46800&page=3 :rofl: :rofl: :rofl: :ROTF: :ROTF: :ROTF: :clap: :clap: :clap:
This sort of leak doesn't make much sense to me...
If these specs are for real, they're going to leave the 3870x2 dead in the water..
I mean, by the time they sort the drivers on the 3870x2 for CrossfireX support, then work out the bugs in that... the 4870x2 will be upon us.
So basically, who's going to spend $450+ on a card that's going to be buggy for the next two months, then have a card come out a month after that that totally kicks its butt?
I was going to pick up another 3870x2 im March, but if this is a happening 3 months later... well...
Well, if the MSRP is $499 for the $4870, it's not that much more than the 3870x2.
Even if it's $100-$150 more than the 3870x2, if it doubles the performance? It's worth paying for that...
I guess since they're on a roll they don't want to lose their momentum.