Do you know the difference between reference and aftermarket in the context of video cards?They can also be incredibly loud - but given that they're cooling 275 watts, I can't say I'm surprised.
I had Gigabyte cards; they're probably on the louder side of that scale. If AMD/ATI has something good to offer this time around, I'll definitely consider it...but the 1080 has my attention.
I also believe GP100 will never be in a Geforce card.
But I also believe that GP102 is real and will become the new Ti and Titan to fight Vega
What causes you to think that? P100 is shipping with 4 of the 60 SMs disabled, and I imagine that they can get some chips that could function with 8 or 12 SMs cut instead of just tossing them completely. Eventually they get enough of those and they can ship a 1080 Ti that provides a decent performance bump over the 1080. I just don't think we'll see that card anytime soon.
GP102 doesn't seem to make as much sense to me since it faces many of the same problems as GP100 in terms of lower yields while not having the upside of being able to subsidize the low yields by selling at high prices to the HPC market.
Don't forget that GP100 has huge number of FP64 ALUs (1/2 FP32 rate) and 8 NVLinks that are totally useless for gaming.What causes you to think that? P100 is shipping with 4 of the 60 SMs disabled, and I imagine that they can get some chips that could function with 8 or 12 SMs cut instead of just tossing them completely. Eventually they get enough of those and they can ship a 1080 Ti that provides a decent performance bump over the 1080. I just don't think we'll see that card anytime soon.
GP102 doesn't seem to make as much sense to me since it faces many of the same problems as GP100 in terms of lower yields while not having the upside of being able to subsidize the low yields by selling at high prices to the HPC market.
Based on what we know right now, is it right that the 1080 is likely about 5%-10% faster than aftermarket 980ti cards - which right now (at 1200mhz) are about 25% faster than a stock 980ti and are available for $620 on Newegg? In that case $549 for a 1080 isn't very exciting unless it overclocks well.
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ASUS/GTX_980_Ti_Matrix/23.html
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814125787
why people compare apples and orangesBased on what we know right now, is it right that the 1080 is likely about 5%-10% faster than aftermarket 980ti cards - which right now (at 1200mhz) are about 25% faster than a stock 980ti and are available for $620 on Newegg? In that case $549 for a 1080 isn't very exciting unless it overclocks well.
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ASUS/GTX_980_Ti_Matrix/23.html
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814125787
Yes, that what I've been saying for the last few days.
If it doesn't monster-OC like the 980ti, it's almost a side-grade for 980ti users.
and the non-Founder 1080 have a $599 MSRP, not $549.
I doubt you can guarantee that, it'll still require some serious cooling, even when air cooled, & then the power consumption will also be something like 200~225W guaranteed.why people compare apples and orangesalways :\
like the 1080 can't be OC ...
So yes, 1080 can be OC, and above 2GHz guaranteed
Once for all:
reference 1080 is ~25% faster than reference 980Ti
and 1080 OC will also be 25% faster than 980Ti OC (2,1GHz is 25% OC above 1700MHz reference)
WOW, they showed an overclocked 1080 with custom cooling at a PR conference! It must mean that all cards overclock similarly. There's no chance that they selected a cherry picked card!why people compare apples and orangesalways :\
like the 1080 can't be OC ...
So yes, 1080 can be OC, and above 2GHz guaranteed
Once for all:
reference 1080 is ~25% faster than reference 980Ti
and 1080 OC will also be 25% faster than 980Ti OC (2,1GHz is 25% OC above 1700MHz reference)
why people compare apples and orangesalways :\
like the 1080 can't be OC ...
So yes, 1080 can be OC, and above 2GHz guaranteed
Once for all:
reference 1080 is ~25% faster than reference 980Ti
and 1080 OC will also be 25% faster than 980Ti OC (2,1GHz is 25% OC above 1700MHz reference)
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I doubt you can guarantee that, it'll still require some serious cooling, even when air cooled, & then the power consumption will also be something like 200~225W guaranteed.
Have you heard what JHH said during event ?wow, they showed an overclocked 1080 with custom cooling at a PR conference! It must mean that all cards overclock similarly. There's no chance that they selected a cherry picked card!
ahah so ironic... you are the one saying that Pascal is Maxwell at FF16+, so you should know that both chips will have same OC behavior ()Wasn't the OC'ed version of the GPU compared to reference GTX 980 Ti? And that shown 25% increase in performance over it?
Have you heard what JHH said during event ?
He was so happy about that, a huge spike to AMD when he said that 1080 has huge OC headroom. He said that it will OC "easily" above 2GHz
and yes it will be above 180W (value at reference clocks), but whiat card doesn't increase power when OC ?it's not specific to NV, nor black magic guys
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Did you understood my question, or not?ahah so ironic... you are the one saying that Pascal is Maxwell at FF16+, so you should know that both chips will have same OC behavior ()![]()
yes my expectation was a bit lower, yours a bit higher.You were the one who argued that increasing the TDP would be really bad from marketing point of view, for Nvidia, when I said the TDP will be around 200W.
No, does it matter though? Like I said, OC up to 2GHz isn't guaranteed, not even by JHH & there's no need to over stress the importance of that particular number since actual performance gains will also be different for each gamer.Have you heard what JHH said during event ?
He was so happy about that, a big spike to AMD when he said that 1080 has huge OC headroom. He said that it will OC "easily" above 2GHz
and yes, when OC, it will be above 180W (value at reference clocks), but what card doesn't increase power when OC ?it's not specific to NV, nor black magic guys
![]()
why people compare apples and orangesalways :\
like the 1080 can't be OC ...
So yes, 1080 can be OC, and above 2GHz guaranteed
Once for all:
reference 1080 is ~25% faster than reference 980Ti
and 1080 OC will also be 25% faster than 980Ti OC (2,1GHz is 25% OC above 1700MHz reference)
Have you heard what JHH said during event ?
He was so happy about that, a big spike to AMD when he said that 1080 has huge OC headroom. He said that it will OC "easily" above 2GHz
and yes, when OC, it will be above 180W (value at reference clocks), but what card doesn't increase power when OC ?it's not specific to NV, nor black magic guys
![]()
why people compare apples and orangesalways :\
like the 1080 can't be OC ...
So yes, 1080 can be OC, and above 2GHz guaranteed
Once for all:
reference 1080 is ~25% faster than reference 980Ti
and 1080 OC will also be 25% faster than 980Ti OC (2,1GHz is 25% OC above 1700MHz reference)
You addressed nothing of my post, but responded to me. My point stand, the 1080Ti will do perfectly fine, and if you think the 1080 customers will be pissed off then you are completely ignoring history.What does AMD have anything to do with it? It's a simple matter of GP100 being very limited by the fact that it's a massive die on a new node and isn't going to yield well. They can either sell every functional die for $12,000 or they can sell it for around $1,500 because that's what the performance premium could command.
Some people would gladly pay for it because they'll always buy the most powerful card. Hell they'd probably buy two of them, but it doesn't make any financial sense for NV to sell something for 1/10 of what they could get otherwise.
Eventually they will release a consumer GP100 die, but I don't see it happening until late 2017. P100 isn't shipping until early next year so it's unlikely we see a consumer version before the summer and more likely not until next fall. The person I was replying to was asking about the 1080 lasting 6 months before NV comes out with a new card that beats it. I don't see that happening for the reasons I've outlined above. The only way it happens is if they sell an even more cut down version of GP100 as a 1080 Ti, which they may well do, but it really depends on the yields.
If you hold onto your card for that long, then you really have no right buying Nvidia products. You just are pledging yourself to horrendous performance for long periods of time. Get the 1080Ti if you want, but if you're going to wait 2 generations inbetween high end Nvidia purchases, you're getting outperformed by cards half the price, regularly, and that's highly disappointing.