Is the PCI Express Bus faster/better then AGP?

stuman19

Senior member
Jul 13, 2002
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I've been noticing that a lot of the computers are now using PCI Express for the bus for their video cards. Is that a good selling point or no? Is AGP still the way go to or are companies migrating towards PCI Express?

Thanks,
Stu
 

SocrPlyr

Golden Member
Oct 9, 1999
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eventually everything will be PCI express... all new chipsets will support the tech etc...
is it actually causing performance gains? not really but it does leave a ton of headroom for the future and companies are actually going back to looking at main memory for their graphics memory again (at least for some of it)

Josh
 

kkeennyy

Banned
Sep 23, 2004
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A Look at PCI Express - Page 1
http://www.neoseeker.com/Artic...atures/pciexpresstech/

PCI-X can currently burst to roughly 1 gigabyte/second with the PCI-X 2.0 specification calling for roughly 4 gigs a second. This sounds pretty good initially until it is realized that PCI-X is still a shared bus and is more expensive to implement. Seeing as how a server boards usually have multiple PCI-X slots, the bandwidth is not as impressive as it sounds and multiple x1, x2 PCI Express slots will likely be more efficient and it will also be cheaper. Of course there is a slight Catch-22 in this situation also. SCSI, RAID and Gigabit Ethernet cards need to start coming out in PCI Express formats before there is any sort of acceptance. This of course takes time and although PCI Express should replace PCI-X at some point in the future, the transition will be more gradual instead of the overnight shift that will be seen with AGP and PCI Express.

PCI Express is no doubt interesting technology. Its applications go beyond just raw bandwidth as one of its design goals was to adapt to the changing role of computers beyond single data stream crunching machines to multimedia processing units that has time dependant data which the PCI bus does not have provisions for. It looks like its ability to scale up will keep it relevant for a long time and it provides many advantages over the PCI bus. Consumers should be cautioned that a lot of the benefits that it will provide may not be realized right away kind of like the lack of USB devices when USB was first introduced.
 

LeadMagnet

Platinum Member
Mar 26, 2003
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Originally posted by: caz67
No real difference at the moment.

Yup - give the technology - "being chipsets and drivers" to mature another 6 months , and when everything is on version 1.x.xx it should be cooking along quite nicely.