that's the big question: there was never a review proving that an NForce chip was necessary for SLI to work properly, compared to how SLI would (probably) run on an Intel mobo with no implemented NForce chip - if the drivers allowed itThe NForce chip could be a "PCIe bridge (similar to those allowing CF) + NVidia kinda have you got the CD in the drive", or a very specific NVidia PCIe bridge, absolutely necessary for SLI to run well, and that's what noone seems to know...
Last edited by Logos; 07-14-2008 at 12:59 PM.
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What nVidia should do, is offer X38 and X48 board owners the chance to get SLi to. The way they could do this is charge money for a connector which also has that oh so important SPD Chip on it to, nVidia could chage £15 or even £20 for that chip and I bet it will sell well as folks with a G92 GTS could slap in another one likewise people have the choice for SLi.
John
Stop looking at the walls, look out the window
So does this mean no tri-SLI on X58 boards either, since they're using the same old MCPs?
All I see here is a way of getting video cards working with a new cpu when you can't make your own chipset to support it. I doubt Intel are involved with this as its just added in later on the boards, i remember talking to many board manufacturers who were going to do this with X38 boards, but NV looked to have killed that idea...now it looks like they need it.
SLI is an awesome platform, im just wondering when NV will develop their own CPU away from X86 with their own OS to run games, without a total platform solution the future looks to be getting harder.
AMD have a complete platform, Intel will have a complete platform soon, and both are X86
NV has chipset and GPU, but no CPU, this has me worried being honest.
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Tony AKA BigToe
Tuning PC's for speed...Run whats fast, not what you think is fast
No, it isn't. Any board manufacturer can buy these chips just like buying a BIOS chip for example. These are comodities and you don't need a license for them.
First, I though this was just Charlie being himself.
http://www.fudzilla.com/index.php?op...5197&Itemid=37
They're using the 200 version. Others are saying the same thing.Intel's engineers told us a funny story that the hottest chips on their Skulltrail motherboard are Nvidia's bridge chips. Skulltrail has two of these and they tend to get extremely hot.
You need two Nforce 200 bridge chips to have all PCIe slots SLI capable and at the same time you can plug four Radeon 3870 cards inside, at least when we talk about Sapphire Atomic edition, single slot cards.
Intel engineers are far from happy with Nvidia’s behavior and the fact you need to buy these chips, too. It is not the cost that upsets the Intel chaps, it is the amount of heat that they dissipate, and it makes the already hot thing run even hotter.
We’ll see how long this friendship will last, as Intel was so happy to show us the Radeon 3870 X2 running well in its X48 based motherboard.
oh no...the problem is that it will probably be impossible to avoid those NForce chips on high end boards...
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I think this is awesome news. Having both Crossfire + SLI on the same board opens things up. If I decide to move from SLI to crossfire no need to change the board![]()
I hope they enable 3-way and that would be the perfect platform...
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they do, read the article in the news on NVidia web site
http://www.nvidia.com/object/io_1216019719164.html
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That's an interesting post. However, as many have pointed out, if NVIDIA really just wanted us to have SLI, we wouldn't need a chip on the Mobo, they could just unlock the drivers. This NF200 is a pure cash grab if you ask me. It's their way of getting another $30 of every enthusiast with little or new R&D or value add.
As for your bigger subject here, you seem to be suggesting that the gaming platform of the future will be a single vendor solution... are you implying that gaming PC's will be closed systems... basically becomming upgradable consoles?
I'm not sure I agree. AMD has all the pieces as you point out yet they aren't pushing a Crossfire only on AMD CPU's and chipset mentality like NVIDIA. In fact, they are more "open" than NVIDIA by enabling full multi-GPU functionality on their largest competitors platform. Likely this is wise because they realize that they will earn more revenue by being open than closed.
I belive NVIDIA's past thinking of keeping SLI as proprietary only to NV chipsets was flawed (however, no one can be sure without studying the economics of their chipset business).
I think now NVIDIA is smarter by effectively offering SLI on any platform with the addition of a chip. But as I said above it's only a cash grab now. With ATI building momentum, this may be more flawed thinking from NV when people realize they can save a couple hundred bucks on graphics cards and a hundred bucks or more on a motherboard for the same or better performance!
just for those who missed it: the NVidia "tax" has been widely commented in this thread:
http://www.xtremesystems.org/Forums/...d.php?t=194314
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