Originally posted by: mikek753
hi all,
why there are not 4750 cards on sale - for less then $100.
looks like all of it gone somewhere
yes, new dx11 cards are coming soon, so I expected to get 4750 for HTPC for less
4770 for $130 is too high IMHO
what do you think?
Originally posted by: mikek753
I expected 4770 to cost less than more powerful 4850, where it costs $20 (20%) more then 4850
40nm chip has to cost less then 55nm - isn't it?
or should I just wait for a month for newer 40nm mid-range cards? or when ATI may have it?
Originally posted by: mikek753
I expected 4770 to cost less than more powerful 4850, where it costs $20 (20%) more then 4850
40nm chip has to cost less then 55nm - isn't it?
or should I just wait for a month for newer 40nm mid-range cards? or when ATI may have it?
Originally posted by: sgrinavi
Originally posted by: mikek753
I expected 4770 to cost less than more powerful 4850, where it costs $20 (20%) more then 4850
40nm chip has to cost less then 55nm - isn't it?
or should I just wait for a month for newer 40nm mid-range cards? or when ATI may have it?
Actually the 4770 does outperform the 4850 In some cases but the big draw is that the 4770 uses less power & produces less heat.
If you are shopping $100 cards then you'll probably have a significant wait until the 58xx cards come anywhere near that price. What are you doing with the card? Watching movies? If so you could step down the power and heat even more and go with a 4670
Originally posted by: mikek753
Originally posted by: sgrinavi
Originally posted by: mikek753
I expected 4770 to cost less than more powerful 4850, where it costs $20 (20%) more then 4850
40nm chip has to cost less then 55nm - isn't it?
or should I just wait for a month for newer 40nm mid-range cards? or when ATI may have it?
Actually the 4770 does outperform the 4850 In some cases but the big draw is that the 4770 uses less power & produces less heat.
If you are shopping $100 cards then you'll probably have a significant wait until the 58xx cards come anywhere near that price. What are you doing with the card? Watching movies? If so you could step down the power and heat even more and go with a 4670
thanks for the answer.
I need a card for HTPC - 80% HD/BRay (x.264) watch video and 20% games.
I don't need low profile and top performance, but not much noise.
So far it doesn't look like ATI will have any 58xx mid range card below $150. point.
May be 58xx lunch will push 4770 cost down - will it not?
Originally posted by: toyota
being 40nm, 4770 will likely just go out of production before any sort of price drop. new 5xxx cards will be very pricey at launch because of 40nm production still being a little low and to help push out the other 4xxx series cards. if you dont wont to wait a couple months for initial prices to settle down then just go ahead with a 4770.
Originally posted by: yh125d
40nm production really isn't that low anymore. 4770 first came out what, 4 1/2 months ago? New cards are always kinda high at launch but it won't be because of production issues long since ironed out
Originally posted by: betasub
Originally posted by: toyota
being 40nm, 4770 will likely just go out of production before any sort of price drop. new 5xxx cards will be very pricey at launch because of 40nm production still being a little low and to help push out the other 4xxx series cards. if you dont wont to wait a couple months for initial prices to settle down then just go ahead with a 4770.
:thumbsup: 4770 provided a low-risk test for 40nm production, before releasing the headline 5800 cards on this process.
If there is a particular feature of the 4770 you want, you are probably best advised to buy fairly soon before stock drops further, as official price cuts are unlikely. All this assumes ATI don't carry the 4770 over to fit into the low-mid part of their 5000 series line-up (5670?).
Originally posted by: mikek753
Originally posted by: betasub
Originally posted by: toyota
being 40nm, 4770 will likely just go out of production before any sort of price drop. new 5xxx cards will be very pricey at launch because of 40nm production still being a little low and to help push out the other 4xxx series cards. if you dont wont to wait a couple months for initial prices to settle down then just go ahead with a 4770.
:thumbsup: 4770 provided a low-risk test for 40nm production, before releasing the headline 5800 cards on this process.
If there is a particular feature of the 4770 you want, you are probably best advised to buy fairly soon before stock drops further, as official price cuts are unlikely. All this assumes ATI don't carry the 4770 over to fit into the low-mid part of their 5000 series line-up (5670?).
another day -another news
5700
