Originally posted by: chsh1ca
R400, NV40. PFFT. Next gen Matrox is where it's at! 😛
I don't think you can reliably call this a "triumph", mostly because it seems that all the cards at the high end will be available in large quantities (unlike the FX5950U), and because the performance of both cards is pretty well equal. I'd say the scales tip towards NVidia in the features department, but I was surprised at the lack of reviews involving the MPEG-2 encoder that was supposed to be packaged up with the NV40s.
I think ATI's engineers are more talented than Nvidia's. And I tend to think they have the better future in the graphics card market.
I say ATi gets this round as well. they're achieving the same, if not better, performance as nV while using a card that takes half as many power connectors and requires a smaller cooling solution
Yeah but at 400 MHz nVidia is cranking out far more heat and using far more power than ATi at 520 MHz. Clock speeds and die size aren't the only factor in the equation.but ATI's card is running 520mhz.....the theortical limit for greater than 150million trannies on 0.13 is bout 600mhz........nvidia isnt too far behind and theyre only at 400mhz...
Originally posted by: Rudee
I think ATI's engineers are more talented than Nvidia's. And I tend to think they have the better future in the graphics card market.
Originally posted by: Jeff7181
Originally posted by: Rudee
I think ATI's engineers are more talented than Nvidia's. And I tend to think they have the better future in the graphics card market.
Didn't ATI buy out another company who had designed the 9700 Pro's core? And all this time they've just been making modifications/improvements to it this whole time?
Not to detract from ATI's talent or anything... cause they're obviously doing something right... but I wouldn't credit ATI's engineers for something they didn't create, only perfected. I will give credit where credit is due... they did a wonderful job perfecting it... but you make it sound as if they were hanging a picture and slipped and hit their head on the toilet and had a vision of the 9700 Pro. 😉
Originally posted by: g3pro
Originally posted by: Rudee
I think ATI's engineers are more talented than Nvidia's. And I tend to think they have the better future in the graphics card market.
Oh MY!!! You really have no clue, do you? :roll: Perhaps you would like to meet some of them.
Yeah but at 400 MHz nVidia is cranking out far more heat and using far more power than ATi at 520 MHz. Clock speeds and die size aren't the only factor in the equation
He thinks -- everyone is entitled to his or her own opinion. You don't have to thrash him for it. ATI has been a leader since August 2002 and still remains one after coming out of nowhere. This somewhat justifies his beliefs. Also since R420 is an extension of the R300 core, that means ATI engineers were able to come up with a core 2.5 years ago that is competitive today. Even after Nvidia redesigned their GPU (to NV40) they are still not the leaders today. So again his opinion is well justified to some extent.
Originally posted by: Genx87
He thinks -- everyone is entitled to his or her own opinion. You don't have to thrash him for it. ATI has been a leader since August 2002 and still remains one after coming out of nowhere. This somewhat justifies his beliefs. Also since R420 is an extension of the R300 core, that means ATI engineers were able to come up with a core 2.5 years ago that is competitive today. Even after Nvidia redesigned their GPU (to NV40) they are still not the leaders today. So again his opinion is well justified to some extent.
Depends on how you define "leader".
If running a DX7 level game at 300 FPS is "leader" then I am not terribly impressed. What ATI has done this generation and last generation is create a great pixel pusher. Eventually they are going to have to come up with something a little more elegant. Because eventually games will require more than just pixel pushing power.
Sure the R3.xx was better at shader operations than the NV3.xx but that was because the NV3.x had half as many pipes. What I see now is an Nvidia card with a 120Mhz deficeit keeping up with ATIs greatest. Eventually like Intel you will need a more efficient design.
Good marketing decision btw but I dont consider ATI the leader unless you consider how fast they can push a 4 year old game like QuakeIII great.
Nvidia this round broke even on the benchmarks but excelled at the feature level. Developers will be working on Nvidias solution for SM3.0 for a year before ATI has anything to show for it. So they will be behind the 8 ball when it comes to developing games for their hardware. And if you dont think SM3.0 will latch on you are crazy. Like people have said, SM3.0 is a developers model. The last time I checked developers make the games.
Actually, I'd say the reverse is true. Looking at various benchmarks, ATI has for far longer had the upper hand when it comes to features. They implemented SM2.0 at useable speeds (look at all the FarCry NV3x vs R3x0 benches), and offered various AA/AF modes with far less of a penalty than their NVidia counterpart -- all the while getting beat out at the older "pixel-pumping feature-less" DX7/8 games.Originally posted by: Genx87
Depends on how you define "leader".
If running a DX7 level game at 300 FPS is "leader" then I am not terribly impressed. What ATI has done this generation and last generation is create a great pixel pusher. Eventually they are going to have to come up with something a little more elegant. Because eventually games will require more than just pixel pushing power.
The most confusing part of the benchmarks to me (which has been stated by others before) is the slim difference the 4 extra pipelines seems to make for the X800XTs. It should be a 30% increase in speed over the X800Pro given it has +30% of the pipes. The difference between the X800XT and the X800Pro from Anand's article on the X800XT/Pro/etc:Sure the R3.xx was better at shader operations than the NV3.xx but that was because the NV3.x had half as many pipes. What I see now is an Nvidia card with a 120Mhz deficeit keeping up with ATIs greatest. Eventually like Intel you will need a more efficient design.
Originally posted by: i82lazyboy
I think ATI's engineers are more talented than Nvidia's. And I tend to think they have the better future in the graphics card market.
I think you think what you're told to think.
I say ATi gets this round as well. they're achieving the same, if not better, performance as nV while using a card that takes half as many power connectors and requires a smaller cooling solution
*yawn* you do realise that extra molex on the ultra is unecessary and pureply for OC stability? Let's look at the 6800GT which is basically the same core declocked... I personally say bring on the big 2 molex beast and let me have a go at it. I hope a manufacturer decides to makes add a extra molex to the 6800GT so I can OC it to above ultra levels at the GT's price. Not to mention if you're shelling over for one of these enthusiast cards... you should have a good PSU anyway.
Two molex connectors, a 480W minimum PSU requirement and a gigantic two-slot cooling solution is all the proof you need.Need a little proof on this.
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Two molex connectors, a 480W minimum PSU requirement and a gigantic two-slot cooling solution is all the proof you need.Need a little proof on this.
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Two molex connectors, a 480W minimum PSU requirement and a gigantic two-slot cooling solution is all the proof you need.Need a little proof on this.
Who was talking about the GT?Retail GTs will be single slot.
Yes I saw that laterthe 480w "minimum" is now being dropped to 350w and the two molex's ARE NOT needed to run the card..
Whether you use the slot is irrelevant to the fact that the card requires it to cool it. That's what this discussion was about - power requirements.who gives a crap...like you use your first PCI slot anyways..
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Whether you use the slot is irrelevant to the fact that the card requires it to cool it. That's what this discussion was about - power requirements.
on reference boards its dual slots...we may see singles once everyone else gets a hold of the things......holding reference designs against what posibly may hit shelves is not really showing much. sure it may run warm and be a bear to cool...but once a company gets it they may design their own system which is one slot. so again wait for the retail cards to show up then lets see what happons.
I never base an opinion on reference designs...if I did I'd always be let down.
Originally posted by: otispunkmeyer
sure this has already been through this forum and is now a million pages away gathering dust.....but ATI's card is running 520mhz.....the theortical limit for greater than 150million trannies on 0.13 is bout 600mhz........nvidia isnt too far behind and theyre only at 400mhz....if the cards were equal speeds i think NV would win and then ATI would claw back abit with AA and AF
i think wen Nv's manufacturing matures i think theyll have ATI out for the count