- Nov 5, 2005
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Originally posted by: Slitherythesnake
I don't know how reliable VR-Zone is when it comes to news, but it appears they have R600 details.
Originally posted by: moonboy403
7 to 8 months means nothing
look at the G71 by nvidia, it was quite a flop as they had 7 to 8 months themselves in making it
Originally posted by: moonboy403
7 to 8 months means nothing
look at the G71 by nvidia, it was quite a flop as they had 7 to 8 months themselves in making it
Originally posted by: moonboy403
7 to 8 months means nothing
look at the G71 by nvidia, it was quite a flop as they had 7 to 8 months themselves in making it
Originally posted by: guoziming
sounds cool. Wonder if ATI will beat Nvidia this time around...
Originally posted by: akugami
The G71 is a flop only if you think of it in terms of advancing technology. It truly doesn't bring anything new to the table. It is however, an absolutely smart product. Reduce die size due to process shrink. This reduces costs assuming you get similar yields (something that is in contention at this point). Reduce transister count while retaining the same functionality as the previous generation. This also serves to reduce the die size of each chip. Reduce heat output and reduce power consumption. This makes for a more stable and less electricity bill. This also means you can use less exotic cooling solutions. All these serve to save nVidia money while producing a good product that the consumer is buying.
Originally posted by: Genx87
Still not buying anybodies claims Nvidia or ATI will be able to do what the PhysX cards can do, and if they can, at anywhere near the speed of the PhysX card.
On top of that, doesnt ATI require a proprietary API to access their physics?
Good luck getting anybody to seriously use it. While this is happening the guys making the PhysX card keep working with devs to get their product support. Which btw I am pretty impressed with the amount of titles working on support for the card, considering there is currently 0% penetration by the card.
Originally posted by: 5150Joker
Originally posted by: Genx87
Still not buying anybodies claims Nvidia or ATI will be able to do what the PhysX cards can do, and if they can, at anywhere near the speed of the PhysX card.
On top of that, doesnt ATI require a proprietary API to access their physics?
Good luck getting anybody to seriously use it. While this is happening the guys making the PhysX card keep working with devs to get their product support. Which btw I am pretty impressed with the amount of titles working on support for the card, considering there is currently 0% penetration by the card.
Yep I agree, nVidia and ATi's solution are both half assed attempts at physics processing. If AGEIA can drop the price of their PhysX card and get a killer game, I'll gladly buy it.
Originally posted by: BassBomb
Originally posted by: akugami
The G71 is a flop only if you think of it in terms of advancing technology. It truly doesn't bring anything new to the table. It is however, an absolutely smart product. Reduce die size due to process shrink. This reduces costs assuming you get similar yields (something that is in contention at this point). Reduce transister count while retaining the same functionality as the previous generation. This also serves to reduce the die size of each chip. Reduce heat output and reduce power consumption. This makes for a more stable and less electricity bill. This also means you can use less exotic cooling solutions. All these serve to save nVidia money while producing a good product that the consumer is buying.
you obviously dont know much at what happens in the past... do u forget x800 -> x850 what was that? that wasnt even reduced heat or anything or process type
7. The R600 will also be the first practical implementation of ATI?s GPU concept. This is something we would be very interested in seeing because if this works as well as ATI claims, then apart from cutting down CPU load, it might put certain PhysX processor manufacturers out of business, simply because ATI cards would not need an additional card to do necessary computations for Physics. The onboard GPU will take care of it.
3. 80/65nm fabrication process, though ATI wouldn?t elaborate on the exact split as well as why they weren?t sticking to just a single fabrication process.
Originally posted by: tanishalfelven
7. The R600 will also be the first practical implementation of ATI?s GPU concept. This is something we would be very interested in seeing because if this works as well as ATI claims, then apart from cutting down CPU load, it might put certain PhysX processor manufacturers out of business, simply because ATI cards would not need an additional card to do necessary computations for Physics. The onboard GPU will take care of it.
i don;t this. whats ati GPU concept.
3. 80/65nm fabrication process, though ATI wouldn?t elaborate on the exact split as well as why they weren?t sticking to just a single fabrication process.
and what does this mean.
Originally posted by: Sable
2. At the moment ATI are producing CPU's using a 90nm process. It refers to the lengths of the gates on the transistors used in the core (I think).