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Nvidia Talks About Next-Gen Geforce, Plus Pics

Per Hansson writes "Techspot was at Comdex in Sweden a few days ago; we have now posted a small interview with Nvidia along with some high-res pictures of the Geforce FX on this page in our new comments system." This is one of the strangest looking video cards I've ever seen (and it isn't cheap), though it may look different by the time you can buy it in a box. Which is not yet, despite all the hype.

7 of 338 comments (clear)

  1. 3DFX-like Production Problems? by fidget42 · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Inquirer has an article that takes a look at the GeForceFX. Hopefully things won't turn out as they did for 3DFX.

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  2. Non-slashdotted pictures at Toms hardware by brunes69 · · Score: 5, Informative
  3. Re:Still no dual-DVI! by mike3411 · · Score: 4, Informative
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    Mod me down, and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
  4. Re:Genuinely curius by The+Only+Druid · · Score: 5, Informative

    Its true that there's a maximum frame-rate that the human brain (not eye) can perceive. Its somewhere between 60-120 in most humans. Film is displayed [in the US] at 24 frames per second, video is 29.97. This leads to the common misconception that 30fps is the max framerate that means anything.

    There is also the fact that these are "average" frame rates: if your average fps is 30, you're going to quite often be getting sub-30 fps, resulting in jerkiness. So the ideal FPS is somewhere around an average of 75-135, so as to remain in perfect smoothness. (this refers to your question about why a gamer would want a new card).

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  5. Re:WHY WHY WHY WHY?? by RollingThunder · · Score: 3, Informative

    Presumably, the spec for the motherboard doesn't guarantee that the area on that side of the AGP slot will be free and open - CPU's may be allowed to be there, and thus either their ring of capacitors, or heat sink, would get in the way.

  6. Re:This will be what breaks NVIDIA, just like 3DFX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    No, your entire rant is uninformed. The reason for this delay was because they were moving their chip fabrication process to 130nm. That investment means they can now resume their 6 month cycle for the next couple of years. ATI is probably going to have to do the same soon, causing them a delay.

  7. Re:Using 2 Slots by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Huh? That's how I get my dual monitor setup; geforce in the agp, old pci gfx card in the 1st pci slot (some cards still complain if they're not in the first slot). Losing my first pci slot is NOT worth it, as I need my second monitor for photoshopping and 3dsmax."

    Starting at $150 you can get NVidia Geforce cards that natively support dual monitor, even if they have the DVI output on the back. You just need an adapter to go from DVI to Analog.

    I am running a Geforce 4 TI 4600 right now with dual monitors at 1600 by 1200, works great. Before I was using an Xtasy Geforce 4 MX that had two analog ports, it worked great as well. Get one of those cards, plug both your monitors into them, and you won't regret it. As a bonus, keep your PCI card and you can plug a 3rd monitor in. I have a friend that's doing that today. He seriously has 3 monitors hooked up that way.