Originally posted by: housecat
sli has maturing to do?
nvidia did it.
that means it will work pretty damn good first time out. all the reviews say it works fine for the most part.
considering how monumental the task was, for NV to have it passing all the review site benchmarks is a great accomplishment.
Yes, SLI, like any first generation technology has some maturing to do. Over the next year their drivers will only get better, plus the motherboards that support SLI will actually be availiable to the market in quantity, which they are not presently.
never go with old technology, get PCIe. if nothing else, it can be put into a SLI board once you feel its matured.
According to that logic, we should all be running Intel DDR2 based systems.
It's definately better to go with newer technology if possible, I'd probably recommend an Intel buyer to get a socket 775 setup over a socket 478 one these days, but when the new technology is impossible to find or is way more money for no performance improvement, sometimes it's better to wait it out.
Remember socket 423 and Rambus RAM? It was a dead-end technology that people in-the-know (ie. people who read sites like Anandtech) knew was a stopgap technology before Socket 478. But unknowledgeable buyers who may have thought they were getting the "latest and greatest" wasted tons of extra money on (slower or marginally faster) P4 1.3 and 1.4 GHz systems with Rambus RAM when they were first launched, when those buyers could have gotten similarly performing 1 GHz and 1.1 GHz Pentium 3 and AMD Athon systems, respectively, for much less.