Thanks for the link. Starting to get excited about this card now. Can't wait to see how they perform in "Quadfire" mode!
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Actually, as stated in the review they used the pre-release demo of Crysis which was known to have Crossfire issues.
I want to see a REAL review. Someone please review the R680 on Crysis using the latest drivers, plus Crysis 1.1 Retail, plus the hotfixes installed.
where are all these hotfixes located? are they just windows updates?
Sorry to burst anyone's bubble, but Quad CF mode is not scaling properly so don't get your hopes up.
No surprise really, 7950GX2 quad was a joke as well.
So what happens if you run the card on a non PCIE 2.0 board? Will it not provide enough power or will bandwidth be limited or both?
On XP, it should be exactly the same scenario as Quad-SLI. Tri-SLI should perform excellently (if the reasons for Quad-SLI's failures were truthful) and so should a 3 GPU ATI setup.
Performance in Vista could be a crapshoot.
Decreased performance due to DX10 being lame vs. Increased performance due to DX9 limitations being eliminated.
Which one is greater?
I still want to see how Quad-SLI performs in Vista under DX9 compared to XP DX9. That should give some answers.
"The most important game since the original Half Life" LOL
For crying out loud, this "game" is unplayable on ANY system in eye candy mode in HD rez.
And lats be real! if Half of NVIDIA's dev support team worked on this game, and it has build on NV hardware, do ATI Catalyst wizards have any chance to optimize their code for this tech demo... khm... game?
Only thing that can help is patches with appropriate shader code that will bring out best form ATI math heavy architecture... and if you imagine amount of money NVIDA have spend on Crysis, I sincerely doubt that will ever happen!
Which you could only do on a Nvidia chipped mobo. That would be a huge client base. :rofl: :owned:
Majority of the newer motherboards are based on Intel chipsets, so it really doesnt matter if 2 8800GT cards can beat a 3870X2. ATI will still sell crap load of cards. And if they get the scaling up to par with 2 3870X2 cards those 8800GT cards will mean completely nothing for the majority of users.
If Nvidia actually had larger share of the market with their buggy a$$ motherboards I would agree with you.
I love Ati, however I'm not sold on this....I will buy an x2 video card when they make it just like they make dualcore and quad cpu's...........the technologies there......the link would be instantaneous.......no need for the bridge......Thats really where the gpu market needs to head......screw these dual card setups and dual gpu's.......gimme a card with a dual core gpu or even a quad gpu in a single socket.....hell why not just make a socket with a removable gpu........sell the GPU seperately from the Graphic board..........works for the processor manufacturers.......
Heck why not just let us buy the stuff seperate, etc memory, gpu, graphics board.......we can tailor it to our own needs just like we do with the rest of the pc.....vid cards with ddr dimms and a socket.......
look at a review of 3870 cf against 8800gt sli.... the nvidia part is already owned price/performance/power :welcome:
http://en.expreview.com/?p=53
its funny how ATI keeps releasing cards that can only match the 8800 cards... which came out what... a year and a half ago?
this X2 will be interesting to see... but not much else.
You cant think on CPUs and GPUs like that. So they would never make such a dualcore or quad.
Anyway, socket is a good idea and possible. It was also up with the MXM boards. Memory is a bigger issue tho due to speed and latency. You simply cant have it in say a DIMM slot without huge penalties.
But imagine such a GFX card, it would basicly be a new mobo. So much more VRM modules and what not.
When we get fusion and value nehalem we are basicly starting from scratch again. With IGP performance (maybe x2 or x3) and build up from there.
Else the only options is MXM approach boards.