Originally posted by: Fox5
AGP will likely end up like PCI. It will see new cards, but they won't get any faster. PCI never really saw anything much faster than a geforce 2 level of performance, agp won't see anything much faster than a 6800gt level of performance.
The 7600 GT already dominates the 6800 GT and, like the 6600, has a functional PVP. Indeed, one of the reasons the 7600 was sure to come along was it's a simple GPU replacement for the 6600 on the same board design.
That may be the stumbling block to widespread adoption of the 7900 however I wouldn't bet against selective manufacturers seeing the profit in it. The question for the end-user will remain bang for the rupee versus a system overhaul, especially with availability of lower-end Core 2 Duo and a glut of affordable PCIe models to choose from.
The transition from PCI to AGP is not directly comparable to that from AGP to PCIe because there was an immediate and tangible benefit to the former but not the latter. Add to that the fact that there are plenty of fast CPU's for AGP systems and the impetus to side grade to PCIe would be nil had it not been for lack of comparable AGP cards.
Also, even if all AGP production halted, PCI would still have a place next to PCIe but true there's no need for anything beyond the basic.
The Radeon 8500/9100 was a bit faster than the best Geforce 2.
