JSt0rm
Lifer
- Sep 5, 2000
- 27,399
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+1
I hope nV shares similar info about Fermi's development. Regardless of how it stacks up, there's a LOT of story there for sure.
the focus group will let you know all about it :biggrin:
+1
I hope nV shares similar info about Fermi's development. Regardless of how it stacks up, there's a LOT of story there for sure.
AMD has sideport, in theory can be used for the same thing. So while ATI is able to deliver performance/size, they soon will be able to bring multi-gpu's.
His desire to do this wasn’t born out of pure lunacy, Carrell does have a goal in mind. Within the next 6 years he wants to have a first generation holodeck operational. A first generation holodeck would be composed of a 180 degree hemispherical display with both positionally and phase accurate sound. We’ll also need the pixel pushing power to make it all seem lifelike. That amounts to at least 100 million pixels (7 million pixels for what’s directly in front of you, and the rest for everything else in the scene), or almost 25 times the number of pixels on a single 30” display.
Good read, just wish the writing was better. It's a shame that the site is becoming increasingly a destination for other media outlets for information in computer hardware/IT, yet the writing is still stuck, in many cases, with 8th grade grammar use.
Edit: When you mention Steve Jobs vain is appropriate usage.
Ironic with missing pronoun, the double for, and over use of commas.
Maybe replace the second for with to acquire or something?
Edit: Use is redundant when referring to grammar as a whole.
Edit2: It would seem the best way to subordinate the second clause would be
"hardware/IT; yet in many cases, the grammar is stuck at an 8th grade level"
Edit3: With regards to your complaint here
Your critism is really taken out of context and actually mostly punctuational. If you subordinate the first sentence onto the second it reads quite nicely.
becomes
Edit: I notice some changes have been made already and maybe some more are needed.
Edit: When you mention Steve Jobs vain is appropriate usage.
I love articles like this. You can read about the technical specs and benchmarks of hardware at any random computer website you happen to click on. But to be able to read interviews with the people responsible for that hardware, the decisions they made and the reasons why they made those decisions is rare indeed.
Please keep bringing us more of these, Anand.
Edit: When you mention Steve Jobs vain is appropriate usage.