lol, I love how AMD won the race to the bottom against companies who didn't want to lower their bottom dollar gets translated into AMD IS THE BESTEST CONSOLES ARE AWESOME!!!!
Enjoy your PS4, I'll continue blaming them for holding back PC gaming - PS4 and it's low tech spec's aren't going to change that.
Oh good, you can't actually disagree with what I've said so you're resorting to childish mockery. :thumbsup:
lol, I love how AMD won the race to the bottom against companies who didn't want to lower their bottom dollar gets translated into AMD IS THE BESTEST CONSOLES ARE AWESOME!!!!
Enjoy your PS4, I'll continue blaming them for holding back PC gaming - PS4 and it's low tech spec's aren't going to change that.
On consoles, you can draw maybe 10,000 or 20,000 chunks of geometry in a frame, and you can do that at 30-60fps. On a PC, you can't typically draw more than 2-3,000 without getting into trouble with performance, and that's quite surprising - the PC can actually show you only a tenth of the performance if you need a separate batch for each draw call.
If PS4 has a real-time OS, with a libGCM style low level access to the GPU, then the PS4 1st party games will be years ahead of the PC simply because it opens up what is possible on the GPU
"It is extremely frustrating knowing that the hardware we've got on the PC is often ten times as powerful as the consoles but it has honestly been a struggle in many cases to get the game running at 60 frames per second on the PC like it does on a 360," said Carmack.
lol, I love how AMD won the race to the bottom against companies who didn't want to lower their bottom dollar gets translated into AMD IS THE BESTEST CONSOLES ARE AWESOME!!!!
Enjoy your PS4, I'll continue blaming them for holding back PC gaming - PS4 and it's low tech spec's aren't going to change that.
it's PlayStation 4 vs PC gaming rigs, and the gloves have come of
edit: not much new there, web site only trying to stir the pot.The PlayStation 4 announcement last month immediately led to a PS4 vs Xbox 720 debate, but perhaps Sony and Microsoft's next-generation consoles are competing for second place.
Sony and MS came into the store. Wanted the best there was. Then when the price got revealed. They then asked what they can get on discount![]()
They wanted the best, and they got it. NVidia couldn't have offered anything as well integrated and efficient as what AMD gave them.
lol, I love how AMD won the race to the bottom against companies who didn't want to lower their bottom dollar gets translated into AMD IS THE BESTEST CONSOLES ARE AWESOME!!!!
Enjoy your PS4, I'll continue blaming them for holding back PC gaming - PS4 and it's low tech spec's aren't going to change that.
Oh good, you can't actually disagree with what I've said so you're resorting to childish mockery. :thumbsup:
Sony and MS wanted x86 and Nvidia couldn't offer this
So why were they even talking to them?
If they wanted x86, they'd want Intel, not AMD. They'd also want to leverage Kepler's superior perf/w. Obviously neiter of those two companies wanted to deal with low profit margin high volume crap, so that leaves who? Who is barely making it, has an x86 licence, and a gpu? "Won" is such a ridiculous term when dealing with bottom of the barrel consoles and a company that will work for pennies.
And yet we end up with eight 40nm atom level cores and a gpu that has half the performance of a 680, which is 40% behind a Titan, both of which can be overclocked, both of which will be replaced soon after the PS4 and Xbox come out with Maxwell, which is aimed to provide even greater perf/w increases over what we saw from Fermi to Kepler.
It's the same old song and dance, only this time the consoles are even further behind PC's at release, and will be eclipsed even faster because of it.
It has already been pointed out in this thread, but I will mention it again.
Why involve 2 seperate vendors supplying two seperate components that involves working with two seperate engineering teams. If you can go with one supplier who provides both components and thus easier integration it makes much more sense. Like I said, it's economics 101, it isn't rocket science. It doesn't mean that AMD have better individial parts, just that they are unique in being able to offer both while Nvidia and Intel couldn't.
- Intel could offer the x86 CPU but not a competitive GPU.
- Nvidia could offer a competitive GPU but no x86 CPU
- AMD could offer both a competitive x86 CPU and GPU.
I saw this on twitter:
Nvidia compares PS4 specs to a 'low-end CPU'
edit: not much new there, web site only trying to stir the pot.
It has already been pointed out in this thread, but I will mention it again.
Why involve 2 seperate vendors supplying two seperate components that involves working with two seperate engineering teams. If you can go with one supplier who provides both components and thus easier integration it makes much more sense. Like I said, it's economics 101, it isn't rocket science. It doesn't mean that AMD have better individial parts, just that they are unique in being able to offer both while Nvidia and Intel couldn't.
- Intel could offer the x86 CPU but not a competitive GPU.
- Nvidia could offer a competitive GPU but no x86 CPU
- AMD could offer both a competitive x86 CPU and GPU.
LOL, kinda funny, if we use steam survey....
a 7850 is actually faster than like.... 70% of the users there
but hey, they are not gamers :hmm:
There is no hinderence to use nVidia and Intel besides cost. And thats what its all about. neither Intel or nVidia wish to operate at the low margins that consoles bring.
^ bold. You can't be serious. This has been done eleventy billion times on just about every single electronic device ever made in the history of man. Im sure you don't think samsung provides every single component in their smartphones, or their TV's. Texas instruments would have something to say about that. Or Sony? Or MS, or Nintendo? Your argument about using more than one vendor to create a product is nonsense and that is putting it lightly.
A 7850 is a decent mid range performer...... today. Barely. Now throw 8GB of GDDR5 on it. Probably not powerful enough to use it. Now fast forward to Christmas 2013. All new hardware "should" be out by both AMD and Nvidia. Further pushing back the already aging today 7850.
Bingo. Cost is ultimately the deciding factor.
There is no hinderence to use nVidia and Intel besides cost. And thats what its all about. neither Intel or nVidia wish to operate at the low margins that consoles bring.
It has already been pointed out in this thread, but I will mention it again.
Why involve 2 seperate vendors supplying two seperate components that involves working with two seperate engineering teams. If you can go with one supplier who provides both components and thus easier integration it makes much more sense. Like I said, it's economics 101, it isn't rocket science. It doesn't mean that AMD have better individial parts, just that they are unique in being able to offer both while Nvidia and Intel couldn't.
- Intel could offer the x86 CPU but not a competitive GPU.
- Nvidia could offer a competitive GPU but no x86 CPU
- AMD could offer both a competitive x86 CPU and GPU.
So explain why they even talked to Nvidia in the first place.
According to this thread if Sony went with Intel/nVidia the spec sheet would be:
GTX Titan
i7 3960X
16 GB GDDR5 RAM
Lol.
So explain why they even talked to Nvidia in the first place.
For that to be worth answering you'd first need to show that Sony pursued nvidia to provide the chip rather than nvidia vying for the contract and backing out.
Another train wreck thread right here full of emotionally brand invested butt hurt and pseudo financial acolytes.
To try and make money of course. Do you really need to ask such a silly question?
