Originally posted by: ronnn
Both companies have been doing this type of stuff in this price range for years. Must work out for them, as they keep doing it. yawn
Originally posted by: Borealis7
well not slower, but there were the 8800GTS 320/640 MB that were later made with newer chips (g92) and 512 MB.
so if i tell you i have a 8800GTS, which card do i have?
but if i tell you that i have a GTX 260 then...wait...no...that has 2 versions as well!
Originally posted by: error8
Originally posted by: Borealis7
well not slower, but there were the 8800GTS 320/640 MB that were later made with newer chips (g92) and 512 MB.
so if i tell you i have a 8800GTS, which card do i have?
but if i tell you that i have a GTX 260 then...wait...no...that has 2 versions as well!
:laugh:
Yeah, Nvidia is starting to loose its head with all this funky naming scheme. This isn't a problem for us, the hardware geeks, but for the average Joe who just wants a card to game on, it might prove difficult.
Originally posted by: clandren
Originally posted by: ronnn
Both companies have been doing this type of stuff in this price range for years. Must work out for them, as they keep doing it. yawn
really? which ati card was it where they released one, then came out with one slower and performed lesser than its original incarnation yet kept the same name?
this is the first i've ever heard of nvidia doing it as well
so can you list other nvidia cards which 'revise' them to be slower, yet named the same?
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
This isn't exactly the same thing, but when ATi came out with the Radeon 9200, it was slower than the 9000pro. IIRC, the subsequent 9250 was slower than the 9200. So you could say ATi has a history of naming shenanigans, also.
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
This isn't exactly the same thing, but when ATi came out with the Radeon 9200, it was slower than the 9000pro. IIRC, the subsequent 9250 was slower than the 9200. So you could say ATi has a history of naming shenanigans, also.
Originally posted by: edplayer
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
This isn't exactly the same thing, but when ATi came out with the Radeon 9200, it was slower than the 9000pro. IIRC, the subsequent 9250 was slower than the 9200. So you could say ATi has a history of naming shenanigans, also.
How is that the "same name" or "naming different products identically"?
Originally posted by: Borealis7
but if i tell you that i have a GTX 260 then...wait...no...that has 2 versions as well!
Originally posted by: ronnn
I once bought a 9600xt advantage. The advantage being slower memory speeds.
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
And, of course, many of the "mgr's" (PowerColor, Leadtek, etc.) are guilty of saddling the GPUs with various grades of memory and not passing on that info to the consumer in a forthright fashion.
Originally posted by: betasub
x1900GT? I recall AT doing an article warning about decrease in the GPU spec, but no change in the market name.
Originally posted by: betasub
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
This isn't exactly the same thing, but when ATi came out with the Radeon 9200, it was slower than the 9000pro. IIRC, the subsequent 9250 was slower than the 9200. So you could say ATi has a history of naming shenanigans, also.
This naming shenanigans also involves the "renaming an old product with a new name" trick. IIRC those Radeon 92xx GPUs were actually old 8500 GPUs, and hence only DX8.1-capable. It seems "all is fair..." when both sides do it - cf. GF4MX and various GF9800.