Originally posted by: Extelleron
Originally posted by: nRollo
Originally posted by: Extelleron
Originally posted by: superbooga
9800GT and 9800GTX are likely to be priced to reflect their performance, and seriously, what does ATI have in the $200 - $300 price segment? R700 is unlikely to be much faster, if at all, than a single G92, and it'll probably arrive at the same time GT200 does.
Are you kidding? An 8800GT is only around 15-20% faster than an HD 3870, if that, and an 8800GTS 512MB is maybe 25% faster.
R700 will likely be 2x RV670 in terms of performance, especially if the leaked specs are true... it is a next gen card, another league of performance compared to G92 which is no faster than the old 8800GTX.
High-end R700 will be 2xRV770, so it's the same situation... if a single RV770 is 2X RV670, then the HD 4870 X2 will be 2X the 3870 X2... nVidia will have a tough time competing with that with a single 65nm GPU and G92 isn't playing in the same league.
TBH I think ATI is going to win the next round with R700 > GT200. Perhaps GT200 will be a great chip, but nVidia doesn't have nearly the die space that ATI has and they will be competing with a single GPU against a 2-GPU X2 card. nVidia is faster now, but G92 is 70% larger than RV670. On 55nm, ATI has a lot of room to make their next gen card... with RV670 @ 192mm^2, they could easily have 50% more transistors and maintain an acceptable die size. nVidia is at 324mm^2 already, how much larger can they go on 65nm? If they go with 50% more transistors, they're at ~500mm^2, which is insane for a chip.
Anyone else here remember the talk before R600 launched? How "if the rumored specs are true it will destroy the GTX"?
It's really hard to guess what the performance of future cards will be and plan your purchases on guesses.
http://bp0.blogger.com/_4qvKWy...Y2Bk/s1600-h/rv770.jpg
They've doubled the TMUs according to this (good) but kept the 16 ROPs (bad), the VLIW Arch (bad), and the reliance on multiple cores for high end(bad).
I don't get "should be twice as fast" out of these specs- why do you?
http://www.siliconmadness.com/...ts-specifications.html
a dual GPU card will be the flagship.
Since the RV670 did about 528Gflops at 825MHz, this would mean that the new architecture isn't particularly tweaked, at least on the theoretical throughput front.
If this is indeed the form of the R700 architecture, it seems nothing more than a tweaked RV670, which was a tweaked R600.
The HD 3870X2 scales relatively well in some cases but a single card with the same power will wipe out the floor with the RV770X2.
If they're going with CF tech to compete again, it will be a long year for AMD. MultiCard tech should mainly be used when a single core can't bring that level of performance.
This isn't the same as with R600. R600 was a new architecture and nobody could know how it would perform; everyone expected it to be faster because ATI has always had faster cards since the 9700 Pro... why would they expect anything else? We all know ATI screwed up with R600, but there is nothing wrong with the architecture. The problem was that the chip couldn't hit the clockspeeds it needed to hit on the 80nm process (because of heat issues), the lack of enough texture power, and lack of dedicated AA hardware.
With R700, we know pretty much what to expect - this isn't a completely new architecture, it's a refinement of R600/RV670. What exactly has been changed in terms of architecture is unknown, but we do know from the raw specifications how it will perform.
How am I getting "twice as fast?" Look at the chart you provided. According to that, RV770 has 480SP clocked at 1050MHz.
1.05GHz * 480 SP *2 = 1008
0.775GHz * 320SP * 2 = 496
RV770 = 2.03X RV670
In terms of texture power:
1.05GHz * 32 = 33.6
0.775GHz * 16 = 12.4
RV770 = 2.71X RV670
So RV770 has over 2X the shading power of RV670 and close to 3X the texture power. Texture power is a huge bottleneck of R600-based parts and if RV770 has 2.7X the texture power, this will improve performance greatly. You're also talking about 35% more pixel power and 2X the memory bandwidth of RV670.
This is also assuming that R700 isn't faster clock-for-clock, which it almost certainly will be. One thing that is likely to appear in R700 is dedicated AA hardware, another bottleneck of R600 that reduced performance.
Multi-GPU is going to be the way to go, whether you like it or not. If you want GPUs to continue to be 2X as fast every year, then you need to have more than one die involved on high-end cards. It's simply not economical to have a chip that is 500-600mm^2 in size and also, having one chip for the mainstream and high-end reduces R&D and design time.
Crossfire scales very well in virtually every situation except DX10 at this point; ATI's DX10 drivers need refinement in general, and I'm sure that this will be improved by the time that R700 comes about. ATI is clearly going the multi-GPU route and this will force them to improve their drivers.
In most cases HD 3870 X2 is a good deal faster than the 8800GTX, and HD 4870 X2 will be 2X+ faster than the 3870 X2. GT200 will have to be around 2.0-2.5X G80/G92 in terms of performance if it wants to keep up.