Originally posted by: Rollo
It will be interesting to see what nVidia's strategy here is-
1. Raise the price of ULI Southbridges to make the ATI motherboards no longer competitive.
2. Assimilate ULI tech into various nForce chipsets and no longer sell separate Southbridges to ATI board makers
Either way, not a very Merry Christmas for ATI- first trumped at the high end single card, then perhaps getting the rug pulled out from under Crossfire. Ouch.
I have to admit I'm impressed by this move, it's really starting to look like days gone by where every move ATI makes, nVidia has an answer waiting.
Originally posted by: sandorski
Originally posted by: Rollo
It will be interesting to see what nVidia's strategy here is-
1. Raise the price of ULI Southbridges to make the ATI motherboards no longer competitive.
2. Assimilate ULI tech into various nForce chipsets and no longer sell separate Southbridges to ATI board makers
Either way, not a very Merry Christmas for ATI- first trumped at the high end single card, then perhaps getting the rug pulled out from under Crossfire. Ouch.
I have to admit I'm impressed by this move, it's really starting to look like days gone by where every move ATI makes, nVidia has an answer waiting.
If Nvidias "answer" is to just by up competition to thwart other competition, it's not much of an "answer".
Originally posted by: sandorski
Originally posted by: Rollo
It will be interesting to see what nVidia's strategy here is-
1. Raise the price of ULI Southbridges to make the ATI motherboards no longer competitive.
2. Assimilate ULI tech into various nForce chipsets and no longer sell separate Southbridges to ATI board makers
Either way, not a very Merry Christmas for ATI- first trumped at the high end single card, then perhaps getting the rug pulled out from under Crossfire. Ouch.
I have to admit I'm impressed by this move, it's really starting to look like days gone by where every move ATI makes, nVidia has an answer waiting.
If Nvidias "answer" is to just by up competition to thwart other competition, it's not much of an "answer".
Originally posted by: Ackmed
Originally posted by: sandorski
Originally posted by: Rollo
It will be interesting to see what nVidia's strategy here is-
1. Raise the price of ULI Southbridges to make the ATI motherboards no longer competitive.
2. Assimilate ULI tech into various nForce chipsets and no longer sell separate Southbridges to ATI board makers
Either way, not a very Merry Christmas for ATI- first trumped at the high end single card, then perhaps getting the rug pulled out from under Crossfire. Ouch.
I have to admit I'm impressed by this move, it's really starting to look like days gone by where every move ATI makes, nVidia has an answer waiting.
If Nvidias "answer" is to just by up competition to thwart other competition, it's not much of an "answer".
Dont listen to him. The 512MB isnt even available, and Crossfire isnt going anywhere. Just spreading more PR to cover his beloved NV, again.
Originally posted by: sandorski
Originally posted by: Rollo
It will be interesting to see what nVidia's strategy here is-
1. Raise the price of ULI Southbridges to make the ATI motherboards no longer competitive.
2. Assimilate ULI tech into various nForce chipsets and no longer sell separate Southbridges to ATI board makers
Either way, not a very Merry Christmas for ATI- first trumped at the high end single card, then perhaps getting the rug pulled out from under Crossfire. Ouch.
I have to admit I'm impressed by this move, it's really starting to look like days gone by where every move ATI makes, nVidia has an answer waiting.
If Nvidias "answer" is to just by up competition to thwart other competition, it's not much of an "answer".
Originally posted by: Rollo
Originally posted by: sandorski
Originally posted by: Rollo
It will be interesting to see what nVidia's strategy here is-
1. Raise the price of ULI Southbridges to make the ATI motherboards no longer competitive.
2. Assimilate ULI tech into various nForce chipsets and no longer sell separate Southbridges to ATI board makers
Either way, not a very Merry Christmas for ATI- first trumped at the high end single card, then perhaps getting the rug pulled out from under Crossfire. Ouch.
I have to admit I'm impressed by this move, it's really starting to look like days gone by where every move ATI makes, nVidia has an answer waiting.
If Nvidias "answer" is to just by up competition to thwart other competition, it's not much of an "answer".
This is actually the BEST thing nVidia could have done, short of buying all motherboard OEMs and telling ATI "we don't need no steenking Crossfire"?
The ATI Southbridge was universally reviled, if ATI has to use it now not many people will buy ATI motherboards.
Originally posted by: sandorski
It might be good for Nvidia, but I'm more concerned with what's best for me and other consumers. More competition is good, less is bad.
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Does ULI make the chipset for the xbox 360?
Originally posted by: Rollo
Originally posted by: Ackmed
Originally posted by: sandorski
Originally posted by: Rollo
It will be interesting to see what nVidia's strategy here is-
1. Raise the price of ULI Southbridges to make the ATI motherboards no longer competitive.
2. Assimilate ULI tech into various nForce chipsets and no longer sell separate Southbridges to ATI board makers
Either way, not a very Merry Christmas for ATI- first trumped at the high end single card, then perhaps getting the rug pulled out from under Crossfire. Ouch.
I have to admit I'm impressed by this move, it's really starting to look like days gone by where every move ATI makes, nVidia has an answer waiting.
If Nvidias "answer" is to just by up competition to thwart other competition, it's not much of an "answer".
Dont listen to him. The 512MB isnt even available, and Crossfire isnt going anywhere. Just spreading more PR to cover his beloved NV, again.
LOL
Don't listen to him, just spreading PR to cover his beloved ATI again. Later he'll have links from some Ugandan website where some guy leaked a bios for R520s, and a PR release from ATI about how they "didn't want those Southbridges anyway" because their own engineers are working on something "much better, that will be out soon!".
:laugh:
Originally posted by: Schadenfroh
Does ULI make the chipset for the xbox 360?
Originally posted by: Rollo
The ATI Southbridge was universally reviled, if ATI has to use it now not many people will buy ATI motherboards.
Users were more disturbed than ATI may have thought with the limitations of the SB450 south bridge. In practical terms, it made no real difference at all in performance, since SATA2 is not really faster than SATA1 with current drives, and most USB transfers don't come even fractionally close to taxing the transfer capabilities of USB 2.0.
Originally posted by: Creig
Originally posted by: Rollo
The ATI Southbridge was universally reviled, if ATI has to use it now not many people will buy ATI motherboards.
"Universally reviled"? Better tell that to Wesley Fink who said:
Users were more disturbed than ATI may have thought with the limitations of the SB450 south bridge. In practical terms, it made no real difference at all in performance, since SATA2 is not really faster than SATA1 with current drives, and most USB transfers don't come even fractionally close to taxing the transfer capabilities of USB 2.0.