I thought I would actually take the time to read the S / A article and this time start idsecting it a bit:
The NDA looks exactly like the one partners had to sign before the GT200-series launch.Just before the show started, Nvidia reps ran around and made their partners sign a ham-handed NDA list of what is acceptable and not acceptable to talk about at CeBIT.
I've am in contact with several large competing websites on an almost daily basis. No one linked to it because of the raving contained therein.Last week, several sites contacted SemiAccurate saying that Nvidia called them and threatened to cut them off if they linked to the above story.
Haha. Can't say more than that.The NDA looks like this, with text below the picture.
Two 6-pin connectors on the 470's pic looks par for the course.wattage is through the roof.
Other than overclocked cards, I have yet to see clock speeds written on the boxes of many (if any) manufacturers of previous NVIDIA cards and even current ATI cards.Two box samples seen by SemiAccurate had no clocks or specs on them, quite telling for a product that will paper launch later this month.
And the backpedaling begins! Watch this; if a 512SP card is released, Charlie is now covering his tracks after claiming there would never be one.Pricing wasn't set according to four partners talked with by SemiAccurate, and availability for the high-end part, at least according to what Nvidia has promised to deliver, is basically a few hundred units per vendor. Worldwide. Ever.






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