Originally posted by: Azn
Originally posted by: Lithan
Originally posted by: Azn
Of course there's a reason to buy ATI. 3850 isn't a half bad card for the price, have slightly better image quality than a Nvidia card and much better SP performance than a 9600gt can dish out.
Better image quality based on what? And where's the proof that its SP performance is better?
ATI tends to have better color contrast and level of detail but it's really subjective to the eye of the beholder.
3850 has peak shader of 429 GFLOPS and 9600gt does 208 GFLOPS. you do the math.
Originally posted by: Lithan
Originally posted by: Nomel
Well the 3870 looks nice, I mean it has GDDR4 and I think DirectX 10.1 and so on, but I'm on a SLI mobo so if I choose a Radeon card I wouldn't have the option for crossfire. After some more research I also noticed that for most benchmarks it was kinda behind the others. So right now I'm not sure if I should get the 8800 GT or GTS.
I say go for the GTS unless ya save $50+ on the gt.
Azn, != means "does not equal", I was pointing out that even though the 3850 looks better on paper, I can't think of a single benchmark it beats the 9600gt in, so capability is not the same as performance. It's more capable at shader work, but for a variety of reasons it doesn't perform better at it.
Originally posted by: JACKDRUID
Originally posted by: Azn
Originally posted by: Lithan
Originally posted by: Azn
Of course there's a reason to buy ATI. 3850 isn't a half bad card for the price, have slightly better image quality than a Nvidia card and much better SP performance than a 9600gt can dish out.
Better image quality based on what? And where's the proof that its SP performance is better?
ATI tends to have better color contrast and level of detail but it's really subjective to the eye of the beholder.
3850 has peak shader of 429 GFLOPS and 9600gt does 208 GFLOPS. you do the math.
Theoratically true, NOT true in real-world testing or current gaming.
8900(9800)gtx > 8800GTS > 8800GT > 3870 > 9600
$230 $200 $150 $135 $125
Originally posted by: Azn
10-20 % doesn't necessarily mean better.
Originally posted by: Lithan
Do people not understand what capability and performance mean? They are not synonyms. You can not prove that ati cards perform better by added MORE explanation of why they are more capable cards. Especially when your explanation is as ludicrously bias and ridiculous as to call nvidia gpus's barbaric. I said that just because the 3850 looks better on paper, the fact that it is beaten in every single game (wow, ati must suck at doing all these optimizations themselves if they have this awesome card and are tweaking it engine by engine... but can't make it faster on any engine in existence) means that it is not a smart buy. It's the same philosophy as buying a 6ghz quad core that runs at 2v and has a stock cooler permanently affixed. Sure it will throttle itself down to <1ghz the second it boots up due to heat, but its the fastest... at least according to your definition of performance.
Fanboys are always the same. When it's not "But it will be better in future games... according to me... with no evidence", it's "But image quality is better", or "Even though it performs worse, its architecture is more refined... who cares about it's performance in what I bought it to do... the only thing that's important is that I feel its method of doing what it does is polished."
[/quote]Originally posted by: Azn
Never said anything about current gaming. 9600gt wins.But by how much in current games? Not much really. 10-20 % doesn't necessarily mean better.
9600 is best value..Originally posted by: JACKDRUID
Originally posted by: Azn
Never said anything about current gaming. 9600gt wins.But by how much in current games? Not much really. 10-20 % doesn't necessarily mean better.
Originally posted by: Azn
3870 is much powerful gpu than 9600gt and shouldn't cost anywhere near it. 8800gt cost $150? where?
Originally posted by: hooflung
As long as people see benchmarks where their favorite game with the Nvidia cards they will never listen to which is the better technology.
Originally posted by: hooflung
As long as people see benchmarks where their favorite game with the Nvidia cards they will never listen to which is the better technology. Damn the driver debauchery going on over at Nvidia, the lack of support for many older games which are still played by hundreds of thousands of people around the world. As long as it runs Crysis and a few other titles a bit more faster it must be 'better.'
Both camps have their fanbois, but its a shame when people can't make coherent arguments other than 'oh oh oh but look it has the brightest color on that chart on that forum.' We'll see how it all goes when the 4800 series drops and the 8 series is just making up new internal marketing numbers on the same hardware and restricting drivers that increase performance in a few games.
Then when Nvidia release G200 out which doubles the girth of the current boards and then AMD lowers their 55nm chip to .45 and then scale up even higher and add more texture units and keep profitting from their lower cost chips and rival them in that market too. AMD already has the lowend market in lockdown, the G200 better be an awesome foundation for low/mid range parts. They certainly dropped the ball with the 84/5/600 series of crap.
Originally posted by: hooflung
As long as people see benchmarks where their favorite game with the Nvidia cards they will never listen to which is the better technology. Damn the driver debauchery going on over at Nvidia, the lack of support for many older games which are still played by hundreds of thousands of people around the world. As long as it runs Crysis and a few other titles a bit more faster it must be 'better.'
Both camps have their fanbois, but its a shame when people can't make coherent arguments other than 'oh oh oh but look it has the brightest color on that chart on that forum.' We'll see how it all goes when the 4800 series drops and the 8 series is just making up new internal marketing numbers on the same hardware and restricting drivers that increase performance in a few games.
Then when Nvidia release G200 out which doubles the girth of the current boards and then AMD lowers their 55nm chip to .45 and then scale up even higher and add more texture units and keep profitting from their lower cost chips and rival them in that market too. AMD already has the lowend market in lockdown, the G200 better be an awesome foundation for low/mid range parts. They certainly dropped the ball with the 84/5/600 series of crap.
Originally posted by: Azn
Originally posted by: Jax Omen
But how many games do you know of that are SP-limited on the 9600GT?
Not currently but that day is coming sooner than you think. Fallout 3 is supposed to be very shader intensive based on updated oblivion engine.
Originally posted by: woolfe9999
While I'm not a fan of always telling people to wait for the next generation to get more performance/$, because that argument can always be made, ATI is releasing a new generation (not a refresh) of cards in a matter of days to a few weeks at most. The worst thing you can do is buy anything within a week or two of a new generation of cards coming out. Wait for the rv770 reviews to hit the web, which could be as earlier as late next week or the week after. You'll be kicking yourself if you buy right now and rv770 is a strong product line. Just wait.
- woolfe
Originally posted by: JACKDRUID
8800GT is 10-20% faster than 3870. no contest.
get the cheapest 8800GT (evga) for $159
it also has the best warrenty / upgrade option.
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
Originally posted by: JACKDRUID
8800GT is 10-20% faster than 3870. no contest.
get the cheapest 8800GT (evga) for $159
it also has the best warrenty / upgrade option.
hans007 made a good point re shaders impacting 3870 performance. Also, since nvidia has a strange habit of abandoning their cards once a new generation is out, the 3870 will almost certainly continue to make up ground on the 8800gt. Have you looked closely at the 9800gtx release comparisons? Specifically, compare the 8800gt with the 3870 in those tests and you'll see that they are much closer now than they were at launch.
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
Have you looked closely at the 9800gtx release comparisons? Specifically, compare the 8800gt with the 3870 in those tests and you'll see that they are much closer now than they were at launch.
