Where can I buy a 290 which defaults to a 34% fan limit, as tested here by Anandtech - http://www.anandtech.com/show/7481/the-amd-radeon-r9-290-review/15?
If there's now an "only test at defaults" policy it hasn't been around for that long.
Rofl.
Where can I buy a 290 which defaults to a 34% fan limit, as tested here by Anandtech - http://www.anandtech.com/show/7481/the-amd-radeon-r9-290-review/15?
If there's now an "only test at defaults" policy it hasn't been around for that long.
Then again, the entire situation could have been prevented entirely - why do we even need uber vs silent mode? Just make a better cooler and the problem is solved without a BIOS switch.
The meassuring of the 290 and 780ti actually show nearly the same difference of 5db between the cards in this review, as Ryan measuring of 5.5db in his.
As 3db constitutes what is perciwed as a "difference" and 10db as a "doubling". Now go read the 290 noise rant.
Noise is highly personal. But what is certainly clear is that what is meassured have no connection with the words Ryan used.
Thats bias.
Where can I buy a 290 which defaults to a 34% fan limit, as tested here by Anandtech - http://www.anandtech.com/show/7481/the-amd-radeon-r9-290-review/15?
If there's now an "only test at defaults" policy it hasn't been around for that long.
The important parts are what Terry wrote about on page 2/3 and flynnsk on page 5. Anandtech tests memory and changes it from default "out the box" settings - this has to be done with just about all memory that you buy, and they also test Titan with the non-default DP driver switch. How can they then go and say they won't do it with AMD's cards because it's not out the box? Sorry, that's too much BS for me to handle.
I don't understand why the mode switch is condemned? Can that be an example of personal bias interfering with objective judgment? Couldn't a reasonable person view the mode switch as an additional feature, providing more choice?
I wouldn't call it that, and I think that is unfair. The mode shipped from the factory is quiet mode. You have to deliberately switch to uber mode. It's the same with drivers. Default settings in the drivers with equal settings to make sure each card is running with the same optimizations enabled/disabled for the most fair comparison. If people then want to enable/disable certain optimizations to get more performance...then that is up to them.
There is no bias, except by AMD fans who just don't want to admit that AMD can do any wrong and think somehow is being targeted unfairly when it is their own design team that should actually be coming under fire by their users....not the reviewers. Calling out Ryan, who has been does this for years, and making out like he has some sort of bias towards Nvidia because he gave the Nvidia card a more favorable review is really shameless.
All of this is a result of people just taking this whole AMD vs Nvidia thing too seriously. Or, this is some attempt by AMD insiders/marketers trying to create problems for Ryan and AnandTech because he had the courage to tell it like it is when so many try to beat around the bush trying not to hurt people's feelings by skirting the truth.
I wouldn't call it that, and I think that is unfair. The mode shipped from the factory is quiet mode. You have to deliberately switch to uber mode. It's the same with drivers. Default settings in the drivers with equal settings to make sure each card is running with the same optimizations enabled/disabled for the most fair comparison. If people then want to enable/disable certain optimizations to get more performance...then that is up to them.
That's the perfect analogy. Drivers typically come with three modes:
1) Default
2) Performance
3) Quality
Nvidia has a high quality mode as well which completely disables all optimizations. Anyway, the point is that testing with Uber mode is comparable to testing with driver performance enhancements turned on, while leaving the competitor in quality mode.
AMD took some flak for doing just that years ago, when their default driver settings contained some questionable performance enhancements that could increase performance as much as 10% over quality mode. As a result, several review websites now test AMD video cards with the driver setting on quality.
There is no bias, except by AMD fans who just don't want to admit that AMD can do any wrong and think somehow is being targeted unfairly when it is their own design team that should actually be coming under fire by their users....not the reviewers.
... trying to create problems for Ryan and AnandTech because he had the courage to tell it like it is when so many try to beat around the bush trying not to hurt people's feelings by skirting the truth.
Tell us how you really feel...snip..
That's the perfect analogy. Drivers typically come with three modes:
1) Default
2) Performance
3) Quality
Nvidia has a high quality mode as well which completely disables all optimizations. Anyway, the point is that testing with Uber mode is comparable to testing with driver performance enhancements turned on, while leaving the competitor in quality mode.
AMD took some flak for doing just that years ago, when their default driver settings contained some questionable performance enhancements that could increase performance as much as 10% over quality mode. As a result, several review websites now test AMD video cards with the driver setting on quality.
That's the perfect analogy. Drivers typically come with three modes:
1) Default
2) Performance
3) Quality
Nvidia has a high quality mode as well which completely disables all optimizations. Anyway, the point is that testing with Uber mode is comparable to testing with driver performance enhancements turned on, while leaving the competitor in quality mode.
AMD took some flak for doing just that years ago, when their default driver settings contained some questionable performance enhancements that could increase performance as much as 10% over quality mode. As a result, several review websites now test AMD video cards with the driver setting on quality.
Not that I consider Anandtech an enthusiast board anymore, but this is getting ridiculous. Anyone who condemns extra options on a product is an idiot or biased (or both, as this thread is seeming to prove). Adding more flexibility to the end user for how their card operates, especially in the way of making it easier to choose how it operates, is a step in the right direction. The morons who are condemning it our the biggest bunch of hypocrites I have yet see; you are not technology enthusiasts and are a disgrace to the community.
Just a simple question, why not having both measurements ?? one with default fan speed and one with uber mode ??? since both of the modes are present in the factory card, providing both settings results will make an even better review.
The job of the reviewer is to provide information about the product he/she reviews. By not providing performance measurements of Uber mode the review is not fully addressing the features/capabilities/performance of the product, thus is not complete.
That result in making a wrong conclusion at the end of the review.
There is no clear definition (and never will be) of what "default mode" actually is. Several examples have been cited of reviews here that were certainly not even close to representing what one would consider default or out of the box mode. What a review is supposed to be about is information, explore the features of the product and inform the reader.That's why reviews are conducted in default mode in the first place, to impose fairness.
Good catch.Except thats not entirely true.. See your Geforce Titan review.
The Double/Dual Precision function is NOT enabled by default ("out of the box"). You need to enable such in the drivers prior to testing.
Enabled:
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Default (from Titan Review part 1)
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Maybe it would have better worded
Our policy is to always compare out of the box performance when possible, except when we did it before. The inclusion of the uber mode numbers is essentially a one-time event., well other than when we did that before.. as well.
/shrug