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3DLabs Launching New GPU

h0tblack writes "...or VPU as they've seen fit to call it. The Register is reporting that 3DLabs will be releasing the P10 later this year. It's targeted at workstation and gaming markets with OpenGl2.0 and DX9 drivers having been seeded to developers already. Could be interesting as 3DLabs have been one of the key players in the development of OpenGL2.0. The P10 has over 200 SIMD processors throughout its geometry, texture and pixel processing pipeline stages to deliver over 170Gflops and one TeraOp of programmable graphics performance together with a full 256-bit DDR memory interface for up to 20GBytes/sec of memory bandwidth. More info can be found in the press release." There are also examinations of the new chip on Anandtech, Tom's Hardware, and no doubt many other hardware sites too.

2 of 204 comments (clear)

  1. Re:High-End Video Cards by Quasar1999 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This is an article about two unreleased graphics cards, one $600, one $900. No, that's not a typo, these graphics cards cost as much as a nice Athlon system. These aren't targetted at gamers, they're targeted at workstation users, and fuckwits.

    Speak for yourself, I'm a gamer, and I'm more than willing to fork out $900 for a good video card. Hell if I spent $700 on the Geforce1 DDR when it first came out, why the hell not spend $900 on a fully opengl accelerated card? I've seen the current generation of High end cards from 3DLabs, and if this new generation is anything like the current, it's worth the $900 for gamers.

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    Programming is like sex... Make one mistake and support it the rest of your life.
  2. Re:A question... by Junks+Jerzey · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I mean I understand that the graphics market right now is hotter than the 1980s arms race, with companies trying to one-up each other constantly...

    That describes the market a few years ago, but no more. These days, with GeForce 2 MXs being dirt cheap and no one having performance issues with them, no one--except neurotic geeks--gives any thought to updating their video cards.

    But can somebody tell me if there are products currently on the market that take full advantage of the *current* crop of video cards?

    The answer is an emphatic "no." I'm a game developer, and we were focusing on the Voodoo 2 as the low end until very recently. And the Voodoo 2 is still a much more powerful card than people realize, providing you work *with* it and don't just ask it to render 50,000 polygons per frame. I don't think we ever got to the bottom of the performance available in that card, and we certainly, certainly, never got anywhere near what you can really do with later cards, like the original GeForce. All of the fancy stuff you can do with the GeForce 3--mostly based around vertex shaders--is not backward compatible with 90% of the market, so we never touched it.

    Fanboys don't want to hear that their cards aren't being pushed anywhere near the limits. The are much happier to have poorly written games that have high polygon counts and bad art, because then they can justify the money they spent on a new computer and/or video card.