Yeah, but my crobwar review is more in-depth =))))))))
I just want to know how they got that thing to me through Canada Customs.
The last time NVIDIA sent an ammo box and the boys at customs had a bloody field day with it...
CPU: - I7 4930K (EK Supremacy )
GPU: - 2x AMD HD7970 flashed GHZ bios ( EK Acetal Nickel Waterblock H2o)
Motherboard: Asus x79 Deluxe
RAM: G-skill Ares C9 2133mhz 16GB
Main Storage: Samsung 840EVO 500GB / 2x Crucial RealSSD C300 Raid0
i saw this in many sites
29_04_1213356735702.jpg
29_04_1213356735701.jpg
Gaming rig;
ASUS RAMPAGE IV BLACK EDITION
I7-4390K
G.SKILL Trident X 16GB 2400
Intel 530 240GB
2x Asus GTX780
Corsair AX1200
HP ZR30w 30
Win 8.1 pro
Sound rig;
Auzen X-Fi H.T. HD --> Yulong D100 MKII --> D-7100
Well we know pretty much everything in the chart is wrong.
Yup, GK110 is a myth.
-PB
-Project Sakura-
Intel i7 860 @ 4.0Ghz, Asus Maximus III Formula, 8GB G-Skill Ripjaws X F3 (@ 1600Mhz), 2x GTX 295 Quad SLI
2x 120GB OCZ Vertex 2 RAID 0, OCZ ZX 1000W, NZXT Phantom (Pink), Dell SX2210T Touch Screen, Windows 8.1 Pro
Koolance RP-401X2 1.1 (w/ Swiftech MCP35X), XSPC EX420, XSPC X-Flow 240, DT Sniper, EK-FC 295s (w/ RAM Blocks), Enzotech M3F Mosfet+NB/SB
"If the representatives of the people betray their constituents, there is then no resource left but in the exertion of that original right of self-defense which is paramount to all positive forms of government"
-- Alexander Hamilton
After i saw the GTX690 info. released, i think that the chart is wrong. sorry my bad
Gaming rig;
ASUS RAMPAGE IV BLACK EDITION
I7-4390K
G.SKILL Trident X 16GB 2400
Intel 530 240GB
2x Asus GTX780
Corsair AX1200
HP ZR30w 30
Win 8.1 pro
Sound rig;
Auzen X-Fi H.T. HD --> Yulong D100 MKII --> D-7100
Crowbar ^^
Fractal Arc Midi
Asus P8Z77V-PRO
Intel Core I7 3770K
Corsair Hydro H80
8GB G.Skill Ripjaw-X 2133Mhz
eVGA GTX670 SC 2GB
Corsair AX-850W Gold
just curious but whats the total length of the 690?
So about that GTX 670...
NVIDIA Prepares Two More GK104-based cards - GeForce GTX 660 Ti and 670
The word on the street was that NVIDIA worked on GTX 680 and GTX 690 since third quarter of 2012, and once the work was done on the GTX 680 - the company pulled no stops to make GTX 690 the highest performing single slot dual-GPU card. However, even with high yield of fully enabled GK104 chips enabling the launch of GTX 680 (which are in constant shortage sans one AIB that allegedly has an exclusive deal for some markets), there is a lot of 3.5 billion transistor chips which aren't performing up to par.
In order to address those chips, NVIDIA will launch not one, but two cut-down versions of the GK104 chip: the Geforce GTX 660 (or 660 Ti) and GTX 670 (or 670 Ti). According to WCCFTech, the GK104-335-A2 will power the GTX 670, while GTX 660 may be powered by another revision. Given the way NVIDIA labels the GPUs, we would not be surprised if some of NV partners are in a lot of hot water, since NVIDIA typically uses three-number customer codes (GX1XX-XXX-AX).
GeForce GTX 670 should feature 1344 CUDA cores, same uncut 256-bit memory controller and paltry 2GB GDDR5 memory. The clocks should be set at around 915-950MHz for the GPU, and 1.25GHz QDR for video memory, resulting in 156GB/s of video memory bandwidth. Estimated price for the part should be around $399-429, going head to head against the Radeon HD 7950.
GeForce GTX 660 would be a different bird, with no less than whole GPC (Graphics Processing Cluster) disabled , resulting with 1152 CUDA codes. Memory bus would be cut to 192-bit, meaning again - the odd combination of either 768MB or 1.5GB. Given that it's 2012, we don't see anyone launching a product with 768MB of video memory. This part should go for $199-249, targeting AMD Radeon HD 7800 Series (Pitcairn GPUs).
The pricing structure would leave a pretty large hole between $249 and $399, but so is the performance difference between the two. That room is left to the partners to come up with overclocked cards, liquid cooled products, multiple memory configurations etc. According to our sources, don't expect GK107 to come to desktop anytime soon - all the allocated volume goes into laptops and Ultrabooks.
NVIDIA pricing structure (for now), should look as follows:
$999 - GTX 690 4GB
$579 - GTX 680 4GB OC (Preferred AIB Pricing)
$499 - GTX 680 2GB
$479 - GTX 670 4GB (Preferred AIB Pricing)
$399 - GTX 670 2GB
$249 - GTX 660 (Ti?) 1.5GB
Products are expected to be formally announced next week, with mass availability and custom designs by Computex Taipei 2012, which is scheduled to take place between June 5-9 at World Trade Center and Nangang Exhibithion Hall in Taipei, Taiwan.
http://vr-zone.com/articles/nvidia-p...670/15728.html
Fractal Arc Midi
Asus P8Z77V-PRO
Intel Core I7 3770K
Corsair Hydro H80
8GB G.Skill Ripjaw-X 2133Mhz
eVGA GTX670 SC 2GB
Corsair AX-850W Gold
That timing would be perfect for my upgrade plans. The Mid range needs some downward pressure on the prices.
So small :o
GTX550 same size? lol
Fractal Arc Midi
Asus P8Z77V-PRO
Intel Core I7 3770K
Corsair Hydro H80
8GB G.Skill Ripjaw-X 2133Mhz
eVGA GTX670 SC 2GB
Corsair AX-850W Gold
A driver update for GTX680 would be nice too.
lol @ how far off those charts are, didn't realise till I re-read the last few posts.
-PB
-Project Sakura-
Intel i7 860 @ 4.0Ghz, Asus Maximus III Formula, 8GB G-Skill Ripjaws X F3 (@ 1600Mhz), 2x GTX 295 Quad SLI
2x 120GB OCZ Vertex 2 RAID 0, OCZ ZX 1000W, NZXT Phantom (Pink), Dell SX2210T Touch Screen, Windows 8.1 Pro
Koolance RP-401X2 1.1 (w/ Swiftech MCP35X), XSPC EX420, XSPC X-Flow 240, DT Sniper, EK-FC 295s (w/ RAM Blocks), Enzotech M3F Mosfet+NB/SB
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