apoppin
Lifer
Originally posted by: evolucion8
Originally posted by: golem
Originally posted by: v8envy
ATI's problem past the 9700 days was: they were months behind nv's offerings for slightly better performance. By the time the X800 came out enthusiasts already bought 6800s. Repeat again with the 7800 vs 1800. And again with 7900 vs 1950. And once more with 8800 vs 2900 (although here we don't see the performance improvement). In each case the ATI part was a better performer, but not enough so to warrant an upgrade from the higher end NV parts at release prices.
While ATI still sold wagonloads of those cards they couldn't command the kind of early adopter e-peen premiums that NV's been getting away with -- with the enthusiast market mostly tapped they were left with value conscious upper mainstream/lower enthusiast buyers like myself. Sure, I got the X850XT PE and X1800XT -- but it was for $150 and $249 respectively, 4-6 months after launch. Not $500 and $650 MSRP that ATI would have received had they beaten NV to the market.
My feelings exactly. They also seem to engineer the cards for future trends and not as much for current games. Over time, ATI cards seem to age better and play newer games better than NV cards, but at launch Nvidia usually does better on the current games.
Yeah, I couldn't say it better, ATi even still supporting their Radeon 9X00 series of cards, and during time, their performance gap difference widened, the 9700PRO during time was able to smoke the FX, the X800XT PE was slighly faster than the 6800 Ultra, and then in newer games, it was able to perform considerably faster, that also happened with the X1900 series which was slighly faster or as fast as the 7900GTX, and now, the performance difference is outstanding, even a X1950PRO is able to outperfom it in next generation games. The HD 2900 most of the time was unable to keep up with the 8800GTS 640, and now it can keep up most of the time, and sometimes (SOMETIMES), can rival the 8800GTX. In the Catalyst Dissecting article made by Anandtech also stated that the ATi cards tends to age much better than their nVidia counterparts.
Revisionist history ..
by the time they "age well" they are out of date - except for midrange game rigs
2900xt is *no match* for 8800GTX, i assure you - except when you "get in the game" with a title Like CoJ - and after 4 months, LP does run OK .. but a 8800-GTS320 gives a 2900xt a good run there and an 8800GTX leaves my *crossfire* eating dust
