Originally posted by: Turtle 1
He wasn't asking about a comparable nvidia card. And if he did I would say keep the 6800's skip the G70 DX9L just as I said for the R520 R580 line
What is this DX9L crap you are spitting out. There is the latest DX, which is DX9.0C. After that you turn to either DX10 or WGF1.0 which hasn't been released yet.
Additionally, any card that fully supports DX9 will run windows Vista in all of its glory. I dont know where you are hearing that you need DX10/WGF1.0 to run it like that. DX8(.1) cards will be able to run it with limited enhancements. Anything lower than that (ie: Without Pixel Shaders) will only be able to run the slimmed down, no themed version (which is what a lot will probably end up doing anyway).
As for that Article, they have just released the G70. ATI hasn't even released its contender yet. You are looking at 9months more until the cards will be released. He said the design is ready and waiting. Shoot i can design (not really) a graphics card, but that does not mean that it has been taped out, debugged etc... The design might be sound but the graphics processor itself is no where near ready for consumers.
So you all think the X800 Pro I have now will run games OK until R600?
Depends. You shouldn't have too much of a problem in the near future running at 10x7 with almost max on everything however, you lack SM3 and 32bit FP buffers. In addition to that, a year down the road (or around 9 months) games wont be running so well. Take FEAR for instance (BF2 is another example). The games only get more strenuous as you go. I would wait for R520 release and then decide between that and a 7800GT(X). I myself wait about 2 cycles before i consider upgrading. So technically you should be OK with that X800Pro but seeing that you bought that and still aren't running older hardware, you probably upgrade more often than I.
The X800 will last, but certain detail settings will not be available. Additionally, you can probably kiss gaming at 16x12 or higher goodbye soon with that card.
Upgrading now is a good path if you plan on upgrading next generation as well. However, if you plan on skipping a generation toughing it out might be the best idea as rumors are flying about Unified Shaders, 90nm processes, GDDR4, WGF2.0 support. While they are rumors, there is a high probability that they will occur.
Take your pick, which means more, non stop excellent performance ($$ upgrade now and next gen) or periods of lower performance and IQ to save money and save for a next gen component (less $$ save for the next year)
-Kevin