nullpointerus
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- Apr 17, 2003
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That's because the first card is an expansion board, ie. it is two cards. :roll:Originally posted by: nullpointerus
Oh, is that all? Then you have no point. The 7950GX2 uses one PCI-E slot on the system board, and that's the only slot that's relevant in the context of the original discussion.
That, and each of the two cards in the 7950GX2 setup is a heavily modified Geforce 7900GO (mobile.) One just also functions as an expansion board, something the fanboys believe will go away if they pretend enough.Originally posted by: compgeek89
The only reason the power consumption is less than dual GTXs is because these things have to be clocked lower on the RAM and GPU to keep cool enough to be stuck right next to eachother.
Originally posted by: josh6079
Originally posted by: beggerking
OMG, do you even know what you are reading?
LPTSTR driverPath; //driver disk path
means
right after that, "//driver disk path" is a comment to let another programmer know "driverPath" variable holds the path to find a driver.
So it does exist then. All you've done here is clarify it. Thanks for proving yourself wrong. Once again it is then summerized further down:
Originally posted by: thilan29
Originally posted by: beggerking
Originally posted by: thilan29
This is more like a dual CPU system than a dualcore system. Just like the dual CPU has it's own socket per CPU and memory(usually) this card has it's own socket/card and memory per GPU.
dualcore doesn't have its own socket. 7950gx2 doesn't have its own socket per GPU. so do you still consider it dual CPU rather than dualcore?
Read what I said..."DUAL CPU HAS ITs OWN SOCKET PER CPU." Dualcore has only 1 socket but a dual CPU system has 2 sockets (or have you never seen a 2 CPU system before?). I NEVER said dualcore has it's own socket per CPU I said DUAL CPU has it's own socket per CPU. Please read properly and don't misquote me. It's tiresome to repeat what I've said over and over again just because you misread it.
Each 7950 GPU is on it's own card right?? So each GPU has it's own socket. So it is more like dual CPU than dualcore.
So again:
So having said that do you consider a dual CPU system the same as dualcore??
(see above)Originally posted by: Ulfhednar
That's because the first card is an expansion board, ie. it is two cards. :roll:Originally posted by: nullpointerus
Oh, is that all? Then you have no point. The 7950GX2 uses one PCI-E slot on the system board, and that's the only slot that's relevant in the context of the original discussion.
Originally posted by: beggerking
oh.. I see, you are counting sockets...
but I'd consider a socket as something you can plug in.. you can't plug in a mobile 7900 chip onto the card. do you always buy graphic PCB and GPU seperately?
Originally posted by: thilan29
Just like the dual CPU has it's own socket per CPU and memory(usually) this card has it's own socket/card and memory per GPU.
Originally posted by: beggerking
I do consider dual CPU system operating the same as a dualcore CPU system.
Originally posted by: thilan29
Originally posted by: beggerking
oh.. I see, you are counting sockets...
but I'd consider a socket as something you can plug in.. you can't plug in a mobile 7900 chip onto the card. do you always buy graphic PCB and GPU seperately?
Originally posted by: thilan29
Just like the dual CPU has it's own socket per CPU and memory(usually) this card has it's own socket/card and memory per GPU.
"Socket", "card"...what ever you want to call it, it has 2 separate "places" for the GPU to go, just like a 2 CPU system. And it has separate memory banks for each GPU, like a 2 CPU system usually does.
[/quote]Originally posted by: beggerking
I do consider dual CPU system operating the same as a dualcore CPU system.
So it "operates" the same...but how it operates depends on software doesn't it, which you vehemently deny?? But I thought all that matters is the hardware??Even in purely hardware terms dualcore operates differently from a dualcore system, especially in regards to memory and sometimes cache, as well as sometimes any communication done between the 2 processors.
So, in terms of hardware is a dual CPU system the same to you as a dualcore system?? And if they are different, why do you compare the 7950 to a dualcore system when it is in fact closer to a dual CPU system??
Originally posted by: beggerking
actually, in a dual CPU system, memory is shared (physically).
Originally posted by: beggerking
I do consider dual CPU system operating the same as a dualcore CPU system.
Originally posted by: thilan29
Originally posted by: beggerking
actually, in a dual CPU system, memory is shared (physically).
Actually I had a dual Xeon system that had 2 separate memory banks per CPU (dual channel per CPU) and no it wasn't shared. Some systems I have seen yes they are shared but most of the time it's not.
ok, so some are shared and some are not. so lets take out the memory part out of the equation. agreed?
Originally posted by: beggerking
I do consider dual CPU system operating the same as a dualcore CPU system.
Even in purely hardware terms dualcore operates differently from a dualcore system, especially in regards to memory and sometimes cache, as well as sometimes any communication done between the 2 processors.
So, in terms of hardware is a dual CPU system the same to you as a dualcore system?? And if they are different, why do you compare the 7950 to a dualcore system when it is in fact closer to a dual CPU system??
Answer the above question please.
Originally posted by: thilan29
Originally posted by: beggerking
actually, in a dual CPU system, memory is shared (physically).
Actually I had a dual Xeon system that had 2 separate memory banks per CPU (dual channel per CPU) and no it wasn't shared. Some systems I have seen yes they are shared but most of the time it's not.
ok, so some are shared and some are not. so lets take out the memory part out of the equation. agreed?
Originally posted by: beggerking
I do consider dual CPU system operating the same as a dualcore CPU system.
Even in purely hardware terms dualcore operates differently from a dualcore system, especially in regards to memory and sometimes cache, as well as sometimes any communication done between the 2 processors.
So, in terms of hardware is a dual CPU system the same to you as a dualcore system?? And if they are different, why do you compare the 7950 to a dualcore system when it is in fact closer to a dual CPU system??
Answer the above question please.
beggerking
Thilan29:
So it "operates" the same...but how it operates depends on software doesn't it, ?? ??
No. hardware is seperate from software. hardware DOES NOT "depend" on software to operate ( unless you are talking about bios). Hardware operate with its own programming in its bios, which is completely unrelated to how operating system feeds in data. it doesn't matter how many data streams the OS feeds in (as in SLI or windows scheduler), all hardware does is receiving data , process them, then output.
Originally posted by: beggerking
I answered your first question.. so do you agree on that?
if we couldn't even reach an agreement on the basics, it'd be pointless to go further.
Originally posted by: thilan29
Originally posted by: beggerking
I answered your first question.. so do you agree on that?
if we couldn't even reach an agreement on the basics, it'd be pointless to go further.
You answered a rhetorical question...which didn't need an answer. And you cut off the more important part of my quote to boot. Nice.
I'll take it you're NOT gonna answer the question I posed in several posts including the one right above yours and come to my own conclusions.
I guess that in your world the motherboard, CPU, and RAM are one device then, as they share a connection to the PSU to draw their power. Or maybe, like I said in my earlier example, in your world saline is not made up of water and salt. :roll: Your lack of ability to look at something with logic (or even common-sense) is astonishing, it really is.Originally posted by: nullpointerus
(see above)Originally posted by: Ulfhednar
That's because the first card is an expansion board, ie. it is two cards. :roll:Originally posted by: nullpointerus
Oh, is that all? Then you have no point. The 7950GX2 uses one PCI-E slot on the system board, and that's the only slot that's relevant in the context of the original discussion.
Originally posted by: beggerking
No. hardware is seperate from software. hardware DOES NOT "depend" on software to operate ( unless you are talking about bios). Hardware operate with its own programming in its bios, which is completely unrelated to how operating system feeds in data. it doesn't matter how many data streams the OS feeds in (as in SLI or windows scheduler), all hardware does is receiving data , process them, then output.
that is our point. In my book bios is software and before you where claiming without a doubt that hardware could run completly without software. After you have altered what you where saying a bit I can agree that hardware when you first boot up is running with only bios software, but I and just about everyone else fixes that quickly and installs drivers. Why? Oh, I don't know it's just that some people like to use their $500 video cards and play games and do all of the other things that your hardware can't do UNLESS YOU INSTALL THE RIGHT DRIVER/SOFTWARE!!!!!!!!hardware DOES NOT "depend" on software to operate ( unless you are talking about bios
Originally posted by: beggerking
Originally posted by: josh6079
Originally posted by: beggerking
OMG, do you even know what you are reading?
LPTSTR driverPath; //driver disk path
means
right after that, "//driver disk path" is a comment to let another programmer know "driverPath" variable holds the path to find a driver.
So it does exist then. All you've done here is clarify it. Thanks for proving yourself wrong. Once again it is then summerized further down:
no, my boy, he specifically commented its a disk path, which is a path to a disk location. How pathetic of you that you couldn't interpret that correctly.
right after that, "//driver disk path" is a comment to let another programmer know "driverPath" variable holds the path to find a driver.
Originally found in: the link
This function is used to initialize the parameters of the driver such as: driver name, driver path and driver dos name. If you only know the driver path, the funtion tries to get the rest of the parameters.
Originally posted by: BFG10K
In terms of hardware it's a single card (one slot, works in non-SLI motherboards, etc).
In terms of software it's two cards because the drivers react to the card like they do with two cards in SLI.
Originally posted by: beggerking
and BFG10K is wrong. software is required for a SLI setup so the OS can distribute data to each GPU evenly to allow parallelism, there is nothing physically related between software and hardware. NV might as well tweak the SLI to allow single GPU to be used, but then that would be a waste of time since there is no need for data distribution/balancing on a single GPU. Same apply to dual core CPU, an OS supporting multiCPU is required to make use of its 2nd core.
Originally posted by: redbox
I don't know it's just that some people like to use their $500 video cards and play games and do all of the other things that your hardware can't do UNLESS YOU INSTALL THE RIGHT DRIVER/SOFTWARE!!!!!!!!
Hardware is seperate from software, but they still depend on eachother and are limited by eachother, which I think is the point the guys here are making.Originally posted by: beggerking
still doesn't change the fact that hardware IS seperate from software. its not like the hardware (7950) is going to break w/o SLI software. Hardware does the same (fetch, processing, output) with or without software.Originally posted by: redbox
I don't know it's just that some people like to use their $500 video cards and play games and do all of the other things that your hardware can't do UNLESS YOU INSTALL THE RIGHT DRIVER/SOFTWARE!!!!!!!!
Originally posted by: beggerking
Originally posted by: redbox
I don't know it's just that some people like to use their $500 video cards and play games and do all of the other things that your hardware can't do UNLESS YOU INSTALL THE RIGHT DRIVER/SOFTWARE!!!!!!!!
still doesn't change the fact that hardware IS seperate from software. its not like the hardware (7950) is going to break w/o SLI software. Hardware does the same (fetch, processing, output) with or without software.
Originally posted by: josh6079
Originally posted by: beggerking
Originally posted by: josh6079
Originally posted by: beggerking
OMG, do you even know what you are reading?
LPTSTR driverPath; //driver disk path
means
right after that, "//driver disk path" is a comment to let another programmer know "driverPath" variable holds the path to find a driver.
So it does exist then. All you've done here is clarify it. Thanks for proving yourself wrong. Once again it is then summerized further down:
no, my boy, he specifically commented its a disk path, which is a path to a disk location. How pathetic of you that you couldn't interpret that correctly.
?????? Where in that link does he say that "disk path" is a path for a disk location? Or did you just make that up?
Originally posted by: josh6079
Not without a bios, which is also software.