With instructions in the readme on how to disable them, no doubt.There are also threading optimizations present in the advanced panel
That's because you're looking in the wrong place.No readme containing instructions on how to disable thread optimizations here...
With instructions in the readme on how to disable them, no doubt.
During the testing we also experienced numerous crashes and freezes in different situation, primarily in high resolutions or with high levels of SLI AA enabled, which is why we could not compete quite a number of test runs. After numerous crashes we decided to switch to a 1000W power supply unit bought in Northern America, as we believed that the 660W power supply shipped with the system (as there are no higher-wattage power supplies in Europe) could not supply enough power for the machine. Even after the 1kW PSU was installed, the crashes and freezes remained.
The continuous crashes, freezes and problems of the currently shipping Nvidia GeForce quad SLI systems may be associated with early revisions of the hardware, but as the hardware is shipping to customers, any issues with stability are totally unacceptable.
Originally posted by: dug777
I've enjoyed a really great glitch ever since i downloaded the newest beta drivers nvidia lists a few days ago, so i'm steering clear
If i leave my computer to turn the monitors off (powersave after 10mins) then i can't get any display output again, no matter what i doRig is still purring away quite happily under the desk, and i've noticed no other problems, this just started after i got the new driver...
No thanks - I prefer something better than nVidia's beta scraps.You can download and test the 87.08's for yourself
The SMP optimization problems have been in the drivers for years; it's far from "one driver" that has the issue.Just because one nVIDIA driver may perform badly says absolutely nothing about any other beta driver, as you should well know by now.
My my, someone's getting awfully touchy. In case you need to be reminded you're the one that posted the trolling flamebait to garner a response from me so don't start crying when I respond.Why don't you sell your nVIDIA card and f**k off back to ATi land?
Now that I agree with - the driver issues, inflated benchmark scores thanks to the eye-sore quality mode being used, the control panel "bugs" that just happen to somehow re-enable optimizations whenever they please and the months of waiting for new drivers that usually fix nothing when they finally arrive.You know you want too...
Adios. Aloha. Sayonara. Don't let the door get you on the way out...ow that I agree with - the driver issues, inflated benchmark scores thanks to the eye-sore quality mode being used, the control panel "bugs" that just happen to somehow re-enable optimizations whenever they please and the months of waiting for new drivers that usually fix nothing when they finally arrive.
The Red Team is looking better and better every day.
What makes you believe including SMP options in the driver control panel implies the issues have been fixed?What makes you believe that anything you quoted up above is in anyway related to SMP optimizations?
To eliminate the PSU being the potential cause of course, which it wasn't. What's your point? Are you suggesting XBit overclocked their CPU and that was the cause of otherwise perfect drivers being far from perfect?The XBIT guys aren't even sure what is wrong - they resorted to a 1K power supply.
Oh pu-lease, are you suggesting nVidia's drivers are perfect and all problems are in fact caused by overclocking or similar PEBKAC?As per usual, I strongly believe the "problems" are user induced (PEBKAC). here is a poetic example of PEBKAC in action (fortunately in this case it was sorted, but not before the user blamed everyone bar himself).
Except 8.4 is not the same series of driver as 8.7 is and you know it. However 8.7.1 is most certainly younger than 8.7.2, for example.Oh, and one more thing for the "driver expert", you don't determine how recent a nVIDIA driver is by version number, but rather from the date stamp in the .inf file.
The next driver to be released was version 87.08, which was the official shipping driver and was sent to some customers with systems. This fixed many problems, but when we received the Falcon Northwest system there were still issues. We updated the system in our California lab and the same results were seen.
Nvidia, in the meantime, was hard at work on yet another driver version: 87.24. This fixed many system lockups with 3DMark05 and Elder Scrolls IV (Oblivion),
Not just yet - I need to finish up my benchmarks to demonstrate how nVidia's performance tanks when running high quality compared to the eye-sore quality used to inflate performance in online benchmarks.Adios. Aloha. Sayonara. Don't let the door get you on the way out...
Originally posted by: Gstanfor
You can download and test the 87.08's for yourself (assuming you even own the hardware you are so concerned about supporting), you can't with the 87.24's.
Just because one nVIDIA driver may perform badly says absolutely nothing about any other beta driver, as you should well know by now.
Why don't you sell your nVIDIA card and f**k off back to ATi land? You know you want too... and we want you too also.
Originally posted by: Gstanfor
You can download and test the 87.08's for yourself (assuming you even own the hardware you are so concerned about supporting), you can't with the 87.24's.
Just because one nVIDIA driver may perform badly says absolutely nothing about any other beta driver, as you should well know by now.
Why don't you sell your nVIDIA card and f**k off back to ATi land? You know you want too... and we want you too also.
Originally posted by: wizboy11
I'd personally skip on these. I'll wait for an official beta/WHQL driver, or a better leaked beta. I've been reading on the XG forums that these drivers are basically just to enable the dual 7900GTX (on that dual PCB thing) to be able to work.
For now I'd just use the XG 84.37.v2, XG 84.56.v2, and even the good old XG 84.22.v2 which is still the best Nvidia driver to date (IMO).
Not just yet - I need to finish up my benchmarks to demonstrate how nVidia's performance tanks when running high quality compared to the eye-sore quality used to inflate performance in online benchmarks.