Lol sorry for quoting myself here but this is the perfect example of what I once mentioned on a different day in this topic.
Nvidia has a real tight hold on some of its old school customers..
http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/...82#post4254282
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Lol sorry for quoting myself here but this is the perfect example of what I once mentioned on a different day in this topic.
Nvidia has a real tight hold on some of its old school customers..
http://www.xtremesystems.org/forums/...82#post4254282
He is wanting discrete game profiles like Nvidia's CP has had for years now (allowing you to have IQ settings set per game, not just global ). AMD has just added crossfire profiles (the XML ) which can be independantly updated ( between driver updates - eg similar to EVGAs SLI updates you could say... ) Driver wise, that is the thing I miss most about Nvidia drivers. Is it reason enough to sway my decision one or the other... probaley not. However it is a plus for their side of the fence.
Those boxes are so light they are floating. I suspect that there is nothing in them! :para:
Mr obvious. Ofcourse future cards are faster with better features - why else would folks upgrade and buy them?
And I think you underestimate the ENORMOUS effort in architecture, design, floorplanning, validation, etc to get even chips as similar as 9800GT and 9600GT made. FYI 5800fx and 7900GTX were both DX9, but they are very very different.
Does it really matter? The means to an end? R600 doesn't have either 2D core or correctly working AA hardware. Yet you can surf web and play games with AA.
Obviously fake
Ghz -> GB = 1000000 / 1024^2 = 0.9313 GiB
512bit DDR = 512 * 2 / 8 = 128 (384=96, 320=80)
For GDDR5 double the clock rate shown, because GDDR5 fetches twice #bits at a time.
(if you dont use the Ghz->GB conversion factor, you will get same number as GPU-Z)
So, for your GTX295: (512/4) x 1.512Ghz = 128 x 1.512 x 0.9313 = 180.2 GigaBytes/s (GiB/s)
GTX480 from screenshot would be: (384/4) x 1.8 x 0.9313 = 160.9 GigaBytes/s (GiB/s)
For reference 5870: (256/4) x 2.4 x 0.9313 = 143.0 GigaBytes/s (GiB/s)
Almighty GTX480 only a smidgen ahead ... pff.. marketing PR wont stand for that.
Using same clocks as 5870, 480 will be 50% more, or 214.6GiB/s (or 230GB/s in marketing speak - very close to 5970's 256GB/s!!)
nice box design, you mean. These aren't actually boxes. :p:
This exactly echoes my concerns with ATi. I love being able to play around with individual game settings and to be able to force certain settings when needed. I did find this app, which is similar to nHancer but it looks like it is not as refined.
Are you the internet police? I believe that you quoted my first post trying to instigate your point of view that pointlessness and negativity are not allowed, ironically, your post was as pointless as the last. His post was a smart remark, which to be completely honest, on topic of pointlesness, I think was the most so. I came back with a smart comment because of this. Who cares? Why do you care? Stay on topic, and stop moderating because you're not a moderator.
@Deimos
I think you misunderstood my point. To clear things up my point is ( and was ) that no one should expect a launch card using a new API to do well with it. In other words DX11 shouldn't be a major selling feature even though it has / and will be marketed as such. What did this have to do with undervaluing the effort involved anyways :confused: There has always been a growing peroid with new APIs and their respective hardware. By the time we have enough DX11 games to care about, we should have adequete hardware to handle them. As it stands the very small amount of titles isn't reason enough. Buy a HD5 series or GT4xx because of performance in current (DX9/10) games.
All of EVGAs boxes say DDR not GDDR.
As far as true memory banwidth, It should be more in the way of 220-240GB/s on the 480 ( realistic estimation I'd say ) That would put things at 1200Hz on the low side and 1300Hz on the high side. At 1400, we'd be looking at 268GB/s on the 480, which not impossible, I'd say doubtful. Given the wider bus, they don't need memory much faster if faster at all than whats on the 58x0 cards to achieve adequete bandwidth. Unless they chose to use faster memory later on down the pipe (admist the delays), I don't expect clocks faster than 1300Hz (5.2Ghz) myself. This would also make sense given they were meant to come out in Q4, at which time faster GDDR5 wasn't widely available to my knowledge.
All that said, with 1.5gb VRAM and high bandwidth, SLI 480s should be the best 2560x1600 high IQ config for some time to come ( I have my doubts that 2 5870 eyefinity cards will do better )