Originally posted by: Matthias99
Earlier reports made it sound like you needed a special motherboard, but the article on AT today made it sound like it should work in any board that can take two or more PCIex16 graphics cards.
As with the last dozen threads on this topic, we'll really have to wait until ATI puts out a product until we know for sure.
Originally posted by: Bar81
While it technically could work in nvidia SLI boards odds are ATI will only enable it to work in dual PCI-E physical x16 slot ATI, SiS, and Intel boards. No reason to support the enemy.
Originally posted by: Bar81
You obviously have no clue about promoting a product. The only thing incredibly stupid would be your brilliant idea to have ATI help sell nvidia products. I guess by your genius logic then nvidia should enable its SLI technology to work in Intel boards. Oh wait, they haven't done that have they? What a bunch of idiots? You better email them and tell them how to properly manage their product </sarcasm>
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: Bar81
You obviously have no clue about promoting a product. The only thing incredibly stupid would be your brilliant idea to have ATI help sell nvidia products. I guess by your genius logic then nvidia should enable its SLI technology to work in Intel boards. Oh wait, they haven't done that have they? What a bunch of idiots? You better email them and tell them how to properly manage their product </sarcasm>
Actually, NVIDIA first demoed SLI on an Intel-based Tumwater chipset with two PCIe x16 slots. Thanks for playing. 😛
They're not "helping sell NVIDIA products", they're creating a larger market for their own video cards. Artifically limiting the market to their own motherboards is dumb -- they wouldn't sell enough ATI motherboards to make up for it. And there's some fraction of people who simply won't ever buy a relatively unproven ATI-based motherboard, but will buy an ATI video card and put it in an NVIDIA or VIA motherboard. I'm sure they'd like to do this, and deny some MB sales to NVIDIA, but they don't have enough marketshare in the motherboard market to make it feasable.
Again, by your logic, NVIDIA video cards should only work on NVIDIA chipsets, and NVIDIA chipsets should be incompatible with everyone else's video cards. Isn't NVIDIA "helping sell" ATI products by letting ATI video cards work on their motherboards? And "helping sell" VIA motherboards by letting their video cards work with them?
Think about it. They'll sell more of both products if they are interoperable with the competitors. In a competitive market like this, artifically limiting the audience for one of your products is a really, really bad idea.
Originally posted by: Bar81
<snip -- long, nonsensical rant>
Originally posted by: Matthias99
<snip -- short, nonsensical post>
Originally posted by: Bar81
Originally posted by: Matthias99
<snip -- short, nonsensical post>
You have NO CLUE about marketing and you're wrong on everything. The fact that you aren't "aware" of all these commonly known facts about SLI and Xfire should cause you to think maybe you shouldn't be commenting on things you're not "aware" of.
Originally posted by: SNM
14x aa? Yuck, no thanks. The whole screen would be a solid color.
There's a reason most reviews run AA @ 4x now, and it's not because of power limits.
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: Bar81
Originally posted by: Matthias99
<snip -- short, nonsensical post>
You have NO CLUE about marketing and you're wrong on everything. The fact that you aren't "aware" of all these commonly known facts about SLI and Xfire should cause you to think maybe you shouldn't be commenting on things you're not "aware" of.
Certainly a compelling argument there. :roll:
Originally posted by: SNM
Well, I tried America's Army with both 4 and 8 on my 6600GT, and 8x drove me nuts since I started being unable to read text messages.
But whatever. 😉
Originally posted by: Bar81
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: Bar81
You have NO CLUE about marketing and you're wrong on everything. The fact that you aren't "aware" of all these commonly known facts about SLI and Xfire should cause you to think maybe you shouldn't be commenting on things you're not "aware" of.
Certainly a compelling argument there. :roll:
Wow, you truly are an idiot.
Originally posted by: SNM
14x aa? Yuck, no thanks. The whole screen would be a solid color.
There's a reason most reviews run AA @ 4x now, and it's not because of power limits.
Originally posted by: Bar81
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: Bar81
Originally posted by: Matthias99
<snip -- short, nonsensical post>
You have NO CLUE about marketing and you're wrong on everything. The fact that you aren't "aware" of all these commonly known facts about SLI and Xfire should cause you to think maybe you shouldn't be commenting on things you're not "aware" of.
Certainly a compelling argument there. :roll:
Wow, you truly are an idiot.
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: Bar81
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: Bar81
You have NO CLUE about marketing and you're wrong on everything. The fact that you aren't "aware" of all these commonly known facts about SLI and Xfire should cause you to think maybe you shouldn't be commenting on things you're not "aware" of.
Certainly a compelling argument there. :roll:
Wow, you truly are an idiot.
What, exactly, were you expecting in response? Your post did nothing but say I was wrong, without providing any reasoning or evidence. I hadn't seen anything that NVIDIA was explicitly disabling SLI on Intel chipsets, and there aren't any 955X chipsets with dual PEG available (so I'm a little unclear on how you could be sure it doesn't work).
IMO, ATI not allowing CrossFire to be used on NF4 SLI platforms (which are certainly the most popular dual-PEG chipset right now by a long shot) is cutting off their nose to spite their face. You seem to somehow think this is a brilliant marketing strategy.
If they wanted to push CrossFire sales, they'd make it work on every platform. If they wanted to push ATI chipset sales, they'd restrict CrossFire to only work on the ATI platform. But doing what you're suggesting would accomplish neither goal -- it would cut down CrossFire sales while not particularly boosting ATI chipset sales. It doesn't make any sense.