Originally posted by: potato28
Originally posted by: SpeedZealot369
I have a feeling the whole pci-e move wasn't even necessary to begin with... did the geforce6 series start bottlenecking with the 8x?
SLi was bottle-necked by AGP. If there was no SLi, AMD would still be on AGP and there would be a flouded market of AGP cards.
Doubtful... Intel wasn't making anymore AGP chipsets, and ATI and NV were following Intel's lead with video chips and motherboard chipsets. I doubt it would have been possible for AMD to stay an AGP only platform. Especially since the vast majority of people running AMD chips also run an nForce chipset. Notice how the only AGP/PCI-E motherboards around have SiS chipsets. You think this might be because Intel, NV, and ATI are all in agreement that they want to put AGP to bed and transition over to PCI-E.
Sorry, but I don't think the transistion to to PCI-E is becasue of SLI/Crossfire, but rather that these technologies are a benefit of the transistion to PCI-E.
Originally posted by: SpeedZealot369
I don't see what's so great about sli(other then the fact that you have two freakin video cards). It's safe to say that the money you spend on two cards will always get you a single-overall better performance card. 2-7800gt's or 1-1900xtx, the single card takes it.
Plus, you need more power for the extra vid card, gives off more heat and more noise, and generally more of a hassle.
Now, yes the X1900XT takes it, but the two 7800GT's have been available a lot longer than the single X1900XT. Plus, you can Crossfire that X1900XT and nothing will touch it except for another dual card rig, and I don't imagine that a single card will touch it until the next gen of cards due out sometime Q3-Q4.
Edit: Oh yeah, I agree with you... The 7800GS sucks for the price. I wouldn't recommend that card to anyone. If you missed the $200 AMIR X850XT deal at MicroCenter, you might as well save up for a PCI-E rig IMO.