The first story about 50% faster was posted by Fudzilla, I think he beat me with a few hours on that one. I'm not sure what his source told him, but mine was very vague and after hearing some more I was thinking that the "50% faster" was based on the fact that RV770 was believed to have 50% more SPs, I.e. 480 all in all. I can't say that for certain though, it's just a speculation on my behalf.
I've been hearing the figure 480 over and over again, but the context has been a bit different every time. Right now it seems that we're looking at a total of 800 SPs, which means 480 added SPs. If I'm right about my first speculation, we can throw the early stories of 50% faster out the window.
But there's one more thing to it. (I wrote this is in the original "50% faster" article) If you go back and check how much faster each [true] generation than the last one has been, you won't see much higher figures than 50%. With each generation that has passed, the last generation high-end has performed like the new generation mid-range. But with the lack of a genuine high-end chip from AMD/ATI, I can surely understand that most people are terrified by this.
And then we have the fact that AMD/ATI has come up with a way for two chips to share a memory buffer, which at least makes me really eager to see how the dual-GPU R700 will perform, not to mention two cards with four GPUs and just two memory buffers.
I'm very skeptical toward whether AMD/ATI will ever make a new super GPU. It just makes more sense to spread the workload over several GPUs instead, to them. And considering how well the concept of R680 worked out, I can only imagine that AMD/ATI will keep heading down that road. The fact that the RV670 was a poor performer in AA/AF situations shouldn't cloud your opinion of the R680 concept. Just plug it in and it works. No hassle.
//Andreas
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