- Oct 17, 2001
- 999
- 88
- 91
I have heard how SLI is a waste, yet I believe SLI will become more important. I and a number of my coworkers have multiple monitors hooked to our PC?s both at work and home. Current consumer grade video cards only handle two outputs. I have 3 monitors. My center high end display is driven by my high end PCIe card; my two flanking low end displays are run by a low end PCI video card.
For games, only one display can be used for the game but the other two can be used to display maps, etc. For work, 3 displays are priceless. I can be monitoring network resources on one monitor, writing a proposal on the main monitor, and pulling information for my proposal from a web site on the third monitor. This works particularly well with older monitors. My center unit is an 18? LCD while the flanking units are 15? CRTs.
Unfortunately, PCI video cards are disappearing. So for any future upgrades I will need two PCIe video cards. They will not be in SLI mode, but they will both need to be plugged into 16x slots (I haven?t seen a video card that will fit into a 1x slot).
So while SLI may be a waste, SLI motherboards are not. They allow for flexibility, especially if you can use a second video card for something else; for example, a physics processor.
For games, only one display can be used for the game but the other two can be used to display maps, etc. For work, 3 displays are priceless. I can be monitoring network resources on one monitor, writing a proposal on the main monitor, and pulling information for my proposal from a web site on the third monitor. This works particularly well with older monitors. My center unit is an 18? LCD while the flanking units are 15? CRTs.
Unfortunately, PCI video cards are disappearing. So for any future upgrades I will need two PCIe video cards. They will not be in SLI mode, but they will both need to be plugged into 16x slots (I haven?t seen a video card that will fit into a 1x slot).
So while SLI may be a waste, SLI motherboards are not. They allow for flexibility, especially if you can use a second video card for something else; for example, a physics processor.