F*** nvidia
lol IDC
yeah that sounds more like it, the number I saw months ago was ~$40 which would be in line with the lower part
I tend to agree with Idontcare.
This product is essentially promising the silver bullet of multi-GPU scaling, and also indirectly claims its engineers are somehow smarter than ATis and nVidias for their own technology.
If something sounds too good to be true it usually is, so until we see proper benchmarks in multiple games, Im of the opinion that this product will fail.
Lucid's engineers don't have to be smarter than ATI or NV ones. They have a whole new batch of resources to draw from. Remember that Lucid's solution would add about $80 to the price of a motherboard -- this is far more than mainstream products from NV and ATI cost retail!
Im not sure what you mean there.Well, Lucid with the Hydra, are trying a totally different solution to the problem so they're not really beating ATI and nVidia's engineers at they're own game, they're changing the rules.
If by some miracle it actually delivers on its promise, its highly likely itll be shut down by nVidia, and possibly by ATi too. Thatll leave perfect scaling to S3 and Intel, LOL. 😉Also I for one am holding thumbs for the Hydra as this could truly be something that all PC gamers could benefit from.
Im not sure what you mean there.
To recap, Lucid promises completely transparent and perfect multi-GPU scaling that is vendor agnostic and doesnt need to be programmed for individual games.
Again, if this were possible while attaining equal to or better performance to what IHVs get now, dont you think ATi/nVidia wouldve done by it now? Both invest in huge amounts of resources into constant driver development for SLI/CF scaling. If they could come up with a magic chip that does scaling automatically for all current and future titles, dont you think they wouldve already done so?
Alternatively, but still the getting at the same point, even if it weren't cost-justified to produce such a product AMD and NV are not ran by fools and they would have locked up the IP to explicitly prevent someone from coming along and upstaging them like this.
A review for those who thought this was vaporware. Mixed results and not linear but it does work. A little speculation about NVidia's role in the delay also. http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=815
Although there were driver issues that prevented us from completing some benchmarks, we've been informed that the problems will be resolved over time as Lucid's driver development team is works to squash bugs with a wider range of hardware and software.
MSI stated to us that some driver issues on Lucids side of things were holding back the release while Lucid clearly told us that the driver was ready to go and that they didnt know what the hold was.
Meh, hydra looks disappointing. The scaling is not as good as they promised, and the additional cost of the hydra chip is excessive. It'd be a reasonable alternative to SLI at the high end, but anyone else should just go for a crossfire motherboard and put that $70 toward faster video cards.
I guess it is one of those 'the best at any cost' solutions, but if it has even more driver problems than SLI or Crossfire, what's the point? And anyone spending that much on a motherboard doesn't have much reason to use a last gen video card with a next gen.
BTW, won't there be image quality differences? The AF and AA algorithms differ from ATI to nvidia, as well as between card generations. There may be a difference in gamma or some other output settings too.
A review for those who thought this was vaporware. Mixed results and not linear but it does work. A little speculation about NVidia's role in the delay also. http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=815