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New Graphics Company, With Working Cards

gladbach writes "Toms Hardware has in their hands an actual working card, unlike other vaporware cardmakers *cough* bitboys *cough*... To quote Toms: 'A new player dares enters the graphics card market that ATi and Nvidia have dominated for so long. XGI (eXtreme Graphics Innovation), based in Taiwan of course, comes at the market leaders with a line of cards for a whole lot less money. We look at XGI's product range, and offer results of a beta model from XGIs top model Volari Duo V8 Ultra.'"

461 comments

  1. I smell the rotting corpse of Aureal Vortex by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

    Yeah, looks great and you have hype on your side, but can we make it a goal to stay in business for more than 3 months so I can get drivers for it 3 years down the line?

    1. Re:I smell the rotting corpse of Aureal Vortex by stone2020 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It helps if your competitors don't sue you out of business like Creative did to Aureal.

    2. Re:I smell the rotting corpse of Aureal Vortex by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      They lost that suit, but I can understand that it may have destroyed them financially.

    3. Re:I smell the rotting corpse of Aureal Vortex by shione · · Score: 1

      I remember that. I hate Creative for that. They hit Aureal with eroneous lawsuits, none of which they won. All the while developers and, stores steered clear of Aureal because of Creative's accusations. When Aureals money ran dry, Creative came to the 'rescue' bought them and ripped the company apart. I haven't bought a creative card since the Awe64 gold. On my lastest PC I proudly own a Nvidia Soundstorm sound processor integrated on the motherboard. Nvidia announced they are intending to sell this as a stand alone product so Creative better watch out!

    4. Re:I smell the rotting corpse of Aureal Vortex by shione · · Score: 1

      that article I linked to, I think they got some things confused because they said Nvidia bought Aureal but I remember the news from back then that Creative bought them out. A quick search on google confirms this

      http://www.gaming-age.com/news/2000/9/22-165

      http://www.inetria.com/hardware.shtml

      A search using the terms "aureal buys creative" on google does not return any positive results.

    5. Re:I smell the rotting corpse of Aureal Vortex by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      errr "Nvidia buys Aureal" I mean.

    6. Re:I smell the rotting corpse of Aureal Vortex by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Take a shower.

  2. XGI = SIS + Trident by Ark42 · · Score: 0, Troll


    Oh boy, prepare for slow, buggy drivers, hardware incompatibilities, and games that will just won't support the card anyways.

    1. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With PR support from Tomshardware... how appropriate.

    2. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Uber+Banker · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not according to their corporate strategy! corporate strategy!

      It is good to see the graphics chip market is not too much of a closed shop for any new companies to enter. I would like to know how they plan on getting around the many recent patented methods nVIDA and ATI share with each other, will the SiS aspect get around this? I am not anexpert, please enlighten me!

    3. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by sirsampson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      this is different from ati how?

    4. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by HexRei · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Card not supported? Isn't that what an API like Directx is for, so that developers don't have to write support for the cards directly into their games?

    5. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Ark42 · · Score: 1


      I personally agree with you here, no matter what slight advantange ATI cards currently get in the latest benchmarks, NVidia's drivers are simply better, more stable, etc.
      I expect Nvidia and ATI to leapfrog back and forth with their latest cards stealing the benchmark king title from eachother, but I don't expect ATI to ever make drivers I like as much as Nvidia, so I will continue to buy Nvidia's cards.

    6. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Spellbinder · · Score: 1

      anyone knows about linux drivers???

      --


      stop supporting microsoft with pirating their software!!!!!
    7. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Ark42 · · Score: 1


      You would think, until "Card X" comes along and only implements 95% of DirectX 9.0, but claims they implemented it all, and some certain feature used by only a couple games decides to make those games randomly crash, but only on "Card X"
      Matrox and S3 cards always seemed to work like that to me in the past.

    8. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by SubtleNuance · · Score: 1

      Ive run ATI's 9800 All In Wonder and have no trouble *at all* with drivers or stability.

      While people have reportedly had problems in the past, Ive got to tell you, there is *nothing* wron w/ ATI.

    9. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Gherald · · Score: 1

      Correct, but idiots will still be spewing the "ATI has driver problems" myth for years to come.

    10. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, when is this myth going to end? ATI used to have bad drivers. They have seriously cleaned up their act within the last two years or so and the drivers are just as stable as nvidia's.

    11. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by XO · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A long, long time ago, in a graphics market far, far away, S3 used to have some pretty awesome chips and drivers. I used to say "poo" on the S3 stuff, after exeperiencing several Diamond manufactured S3 based cards that were piles of crap, with drivers that absolutely sucked for anything but Windows - the Windows drivers got around all the bugs of the cards, whereas the drivers for all other OS's were just reference drivers, and illuminated hundreds of issues with the hardware.

      Then, I discovered, upon using a couple of computers that had reference boards, rather than Diamond-enhanced boards.. that the reference boards, with the reference drivers were an order of magnitude better, faster, more stable, than what I had believed from teh Diamond junk.

      Just because XGI is a "new player" (with experienced hands) and the beta card sucks and the beta drivers suck.. doesn't mean that they can't make quality out of it.

      --
      "Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
    12. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      Linux or Windows?

    13. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by flewp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree. I've used ATI cards for about 5 to 6 years now. I've had 3 cards, and they've all run great, never had a problem. Some people just get an idea in their head and they refuse to believe otherwise.

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
    14. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nVidia has stable drivers? Since when?

      They only do for their latest and greatest cards. Anything that isn't that tends to get ignored. There was a period of about six months where i continuously tried the latest driver versions but ended up continuously reverting for a variety of reasons. One was GDI corruption, another was it taking 11 seconds(!!!!) to change resolution.

      The damn thing *still* won't let me use the tv out on the card by way of drivers, I have to go use third party software in order to make it function.

      There is no way in hell I am getting nVidia again, because their drivers are absolute crap. I know I'm not the only one with this opinion.

    15. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My understanding is that GL's API is always implemented fully. You never have to worry about missing functionality, because it's emulated in software if necessary.

      But then again, GL seems to suck under Windows... I remember reading an article about how DirectX is implemented very deep in the kernel with lots of hardware-specific hacks, whereas Microsoft never liked how GL was a "Unix" thing and also dominated by SGI, so they make it hard for GL to get its job done.

      -os

    16. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by wo1verin3 · · Score: 1

      >> They only do for their latest and greatest
      >> cards.

      The unified drivers support just about all the nVidia home graphics cards, not just the new ones!

      >> The damn thing *still* won't let me use the
      >> tv out on the card by way of drivers, I

      Then perhaps you shouldn't have bought a card that adds it's own TV in instead of using the nVidia reference design.

    17. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well obviously all the people having problems with the 3.9 drivers are LIEING. It's a CONSPIRACY. Christ you fanboys get on my fucking nerves.

    18. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      I've ran a repair shop that was created as some sort of outsorcing thing for the companie i am currently working at. The ati cards drivers have been the culperate behind alot of the driver related repairs we had to cope with. The newer drivers within the last year were never an issue but the 8700, rage, all in wonder from before that always needed a special driver patch/version for the l atest games.

      i was told that this is because the games customize the graphics end for the specific video cards. This lead me to wonder what the hell direct x is all about and why they are still writing games and drivers that claim to be directx compatible.

      Although you and other s havn't found preoblems, there are plenty of others that do. Enough problems and bugs exist that there was even an official responce claiming the problems were due to optimizations the game/app was using.

    19. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. I'm just imagining that after installing the 3.9 drivers my shit stopped working. I'm also just imagining that if I hit any message board about ATI products there are about a hundred thousand IMAGINARY posts screaming at people to avoid these supposed release quality drivers like the plague. Damn. I just imagined this idea and got it in my head. Damn you fanboys are fucking annoying.

    20. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, its a myth when I had to install drivers 3 or 4 times, and then roll back like 2 versions of drivers to get some games to work.

    21. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by PReDiToR · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If you buy bleeding edge cards, as I did when the Radeon 8500 was new you can expect problems.

      I bought mine the day it came out and was unhappy with it for at least 4 driver revisions.
      This includes WHQL certified and the betas. Before Catalyst came out.

      I wouldn't necessarily apply this to ATI driver writers though, I mean, how many service packs and hotfixes do you have to apply to Windows before you're happy with it, if ever?

      --

      Do not meddle in the affairs of geeks for they are subtle and quick to anger
    22. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yes, they 'support' older cards. Incorrectly. Just because the driver says it works, doesn't mean it does. Again, I'm not the only one I know with repeated problems with their drivers.

      And as far as the tv out goes... This *IS* the exact same stuff that the nvidia reference boards use. And I also have another friend with the exact same problem with a different board.

      So, pardon me for having legitimate complaints and not having it be due to PEBKAC.

    23. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

      So you say your tv out doens't work with the nvidia drivers. Well use the drivers that came from the company who made your card. They will work fine. Stop whining..

    24. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Ykant · · Score: 1
      I wouldn't call it so much a myth as a historical fact that some people haven't forgotten.

      This is the company who (some years ago, I will admit) produced a card, promising OpenGL capability on the box. Did it work? Afraid not. But their website promised that OpenGL would be enabled in an upcoming driver release.

      Meanwhile, those of us who bought the card got to enjoy the great 2D quality (what is it about 3D card manufacturers, that they can make a 3D card with a jillionbamillion triangles per second, but they can't get a nice sharp 2D image?) as well as a nice RCA out.

      Also keep in mind that the drivers for this card could only be described as "sloppy" and "buggy as hell". When was the last time you saw a video driver installation that created 6 different directories during setup? Apps over here, DLLs over there, more DLLs in there...

      Mind you, ATI has had driver issues as recently as 2001, but I digress.

      Eventually, after checking the ATI site on a weekly basis for a month or so, they basically said "sorry, we were mistaken about that whole OpenGL thing, buy this card instead, it has some OpenGL features."

      Do I sound bitter? Let's just say I haven't forgotten about that mess. It's been years now, so perhaps it's time for me to give them another chance... but I'd never say that ATI having (or having had) buggy drivers is just a myth.

      --
      Spelling, grammar, punctuation? We need something that checks logic.
    25. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by realdpk · · Score: 1

      Yeah, sorta like the "AMD's can cook eggs" thing. Heh. Intel's new chip beats the pants off of AMD's in terms of heat.

    26. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by mcbridematt · · Score: 1

      My SIS 650-based laptop (specifically a Acer TravelMate 270) struggles to even play Quake II at a decent fps.

      Probably because it is missing stuff like GL_SGIS_MULTITEXTURE.

    27. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      http://www.hex-tech.co.uk/egg.asp

      But you CAN cook an egg on an Athlon XP! This person did it!

    28. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but I don't expect ATI to ever make drivers I like as much as Nvidia, so I will continue to buy Nvidia's cards.

      If you are so quick to discount ATI, how would you know if they are better or not? Maybe they have already surpassed NVidia. And your narrow mindedness is preventing you from realizing it.

    29. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by 13Echo · · Score: 1

      I've ALWYAYS had severe problems with all S3 problems. From PCI bus hogging with ViRGE chips, to more PCI bus problems with Savage2000, especially when using a bitdepth over 16 BPP (Windows or Linux).

      I've not had any problems with my Matrox, ATI, or PowerVR Kyro series products. All have been great cards on both Windows and Linux.

    30. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by XO · · Score: 1

      Ahh.. I probably should have clarified that I was talking about the long, long ago graphics market where people were going from ISA video cards to VL Bus cards.. PCI hadn't really made it's first splash yet..

      --
      "Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
    31. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by afidel · · Score: 1

      Both the games I currently play have problems with ATI drivers. NWN and Etherlords 2 both have sections on bugs in ATI drivers and what to do about them (often nothing can be done until ATI works with the publisher to fix the problems). These are not the only games that have ATI problems either.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    32. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Catalyst drivers are released 12 times a year, the Forceware drivers would only be released once a year or on new product introductions. You are pretty behind on driver issues. Catalyst's are much superior to Forceware display drivers. This has been like this for the past 9 months.

      Also the ATI hardware is just way ahead of Nvidia, similarly the new Catalysts are vastly ahead of Nvidia. The only place where Nvidia is ahead of ATI in drivers is under Linux.

    33. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed.

      Also under Linux we are using the fglrx drivers and not really Catalyst drivers. By next month the first catalyst based drivers for Linux would be released, this would be the first fully supported drivers for radeons. It is based on the superior catalyst drivers for windows.

    34. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      Ah yes, the "classic" Diamond cards - I guess you're talking about their old ISA, VLB & early PCI cards? Tseng Labs (and later S3) based, they seemed to pull some nasty hardware tricks with the reference designs to tweak a bit more speed out of them - then cover up the bugs with some of the crappiest drivers ever devised.

      Funnily enough, if you just fell back & used the chipset reference drivers, the bugs were less obnoxious. And there were a few hacks around - Diamond seemed to pull most of their nasty tricks in the area of memory timings (defaults loaded from the board BIOS), so there were a few programs to set them back to something sane. I remember hacking some of these into the OS/2 drivers for one of these chipsets (W32?).

      I just turned 'round from my desk, picked up an old Stealth32 box off the floor, and found it still had the card inside. I guess the reason it's still there is I couldn't bring myself to give it away, even to somebody I didn't like. Now I've touched it, I feel all dirty now...

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    35. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Installation Instructions:
      NOTE: Ensure that you have logged onto the system with Administrative rights if you are using Windows 2000/XP

      1. Uninstall the ATI Display Driver
      * Restart once prompted. If prompted cancel the installation of the display adapter upon boot up.

    36. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by XO · · Score: 1

      Trying to use the cards with OS/2 was when I discovered that they sucked when they didn't have their Windows drivers behind them.

      bleah!

      --
      "Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
    37. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They don't work either. I have tried every configuration known to man. I have more pressing problems with their drivers than just the TV out, anyway. I've had more than a few times where I installed them and the system would not boot. I have had more than a few times where I've installed them and there is all kinds of video corruption.

      I am not an idiot, not a newbie, I have been using computers for the past two decades, and have assembled several.

      No hardware has ever given me as much trouble as nVidia's, thanks to their drivers. I know I am not alone, regardless of what childish gamer kiddies may harp on about. In fact, I don't know -anyone- who has a positive view of them. This rabid, unintelligible defense of them confuses me. Because, well, when they work, they're great, otherwise... Well, let's just say I'm still running 3123 on my Linux install.

      Cut the arrogance and start realizing that maybe, just maybe someone has a different experience than you. I know this is a horrific concept to behold, but you must really attempt to grasp it with what active grey matter you do have. You can do it, I know it!

    38. Re:XGI = SIS + Trident by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

      Tell you what, describe to me what the problem is with the tv out. If you've tried "everything" known to man, your video card is probably broken though, and no driver will fix it. In any case, you can't blame nvidia for your problem, they only deal with oems. If you had an XYZ cell phone, and it didn't work, would you take it apart, and call up the company who made the chips? No, you would go to the company who made the phone and sold it to you

  3. Let there be Linux support by kauttapiste · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well if they provide good support for X and OpenGL and maybe even with open source drivers, I'll be buying one instead of that NVidia I was planning to get soon.

    1. Re:Let there be Linux support by reaperbean · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well according to Linux Hardware there will be XGI provided Linux drivers in a few months!

      --
      Thinking is good, I think.
    2. Re:Let there be Linux support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      and that is a good point.

      This company, if they want to have even a snowball's chance in hell had better leave the gate running screaming the name Linux.

      they had better have linux drivers and put as much attention into them as they do the windows drivers.

      Linux users are at a point now that we can make or break a company, espically a new company like this.

      Embrace linux and we will help you succeed IF your product is not crap.

    3. Re:Let there be Linux support by Hatta · · Score: 0

      But will they be open source?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    4. Re:Let there be Linux support by alitaa · · Score: 0

      but if they can't even get the windoze drivers right...
      they want to ship the product in 1-2 months. with those crap drivers, they wont have any useable linux drivers in the next 6 months...

    5. Re:Let there be Linux support by mjrauhal · · Score: 0

      Scrap the "maybe even". They have a chance of differentiating themselves from the competition if they offer good quality free (speech) drivers. They do that, they'll make a client and a recommender out of me. They don't, well, they're just another poser with respect to supporting Linux.

    6. Re:Let there be Linux support by Cereal+Box · · Score: 3, Funny

      Linux users are at a point now that we can make or break a company

      You don't say. Would you care to point out either a company that has been reduced to nothing (besides Loki -- ha!) or skyrocketed to success solely on the awesome strength of Linux users?

    7. Re:Let there be Linux support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dont even try the loki card asswipe.

      Loki died because the company leaders wew robbing it, the employees, and trying to make it fail... oh wait you are too stupid to even read let alone seek out news. I forget who I am talking to.

      and only a complete moron that has an IQ lower than 80 cant understand what he said... CAN is the ability to... not the meaning that it "as done"

      go back to using windows as you obviousally are so damned stupid that you cant handle even a MAC.

      farking dipshit.. go back to wishing you were the guy on goatse.cx and spare us of the inane drivel that you ALWAYS torture others with.

    8. Re:Let there be Linux support by psycho8me · · Score: 0

      Even if he wasn't going to look at the source, someone else could-to fix a bug, add features, or port it. you stfu

    9. Re:Let there be Linux support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Would you care to point out either a company that has been reduced to nothing (besides Loki -- ha!) or skyrocketed to success solely on the awesome strength of Linux users?

      SCO.

      Thank you, thank you very much.

    10. Re:Let there be Linux support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Film makers were already successful, but they obviously are the most important market; ahead of gamers and researchers.

    11. Re:Let there be Linux support by blixel · · Score: 4, Funny

      VA Linux! Biggest IPO of all time. Granted they are bankrupt now, but that's beside the point, no really - it's beside the point.

    12. Re:Let there be Linux support by Dark+Fire · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree, linux on the desktop isn't real significant right now, but that could easily change with a little help. Linux on the desktop is at the point where it could use some help from one of the graphics card companies. Open source drivers and/or open specifications are needed if linux is going to get big on the desktop. A manufacturer releasing open source drivers and/or specs would help linux on the desktop grow and they would certainly be in a position to take advantage of that growth. This would certainly help the KGI/GGI projects. Linux is about choice. Card manufacturers currently support linux in a very limited fashion with binary drivers. Buggy drivers? Well, your stuck with them if/until the manufacturer decides it's worth there time. But it won't be because no one will want to use linux for games because the drivers aren't any good. See the circle? In the windows world, there is one OS with 90%+ desktop market share. The linux world is a whole new ball game. Linux is about choice, choice in every part of the OS. Linux is about open source and open specifications. In order for linux to thrive and the hardware vendors that support it, they must play by the rules that have made linux a success on the server. The first vendor who does will fuel the growth of linux on the desktop and in turn will benefit greatly from that growth. A symbiotic relationship, if you will. Such a strategy would benefit XGI greatly since linux on the desktop is starting to get some pretty big buyers, and they could drive and ride that growth in terms of market share. The wireless card manufacturers could learn something here as well. How does it harm you to open up your specs or even the source to your drivers? Does it really give you a big advantage over the other market players? If the answer is no, then why not put a little effort into opening your specs and/or source and see what happens? You will be pleasantly surprised.

    13. Re:Let there be Linux support by ultranova · · Score: 2

      I care, so the kernel module part can be integrated into the kernel, meaning I don't have to patch and fix the wrapper layer code every time I update new kernel (NVIDIA)...

      And that's assuming they provide a compilable wrapper. If they don't, I can only use the card with the kernel versions they bother supporting, making me completely dependent on their mercy for continuing use of my card...

      I'd be an idiot to buy a card that becomes useless the second the company goes bankcrupt / drops support to get me to migrate to newer models (or, to be excat, the second I next update the kernel).

      So, the answer to your question is, everyone cares, unless they're never going to update their kernel.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    14. Re:Let there be Linux support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would they opensource their drivers, you idiot? Companies can't opensource everything and fuck themselves to the competition. Why do you think NVIDIA didn't opensource theirs?

      When will you OS zealots realize you can't opensource everything to remain competitive.

    15. Re:Let there be Linux support by Animaether · · Score: 3, Funny

      I bet your enter key still has the original matte finish to it :)

    16. Re:Let there be Linux support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Why would they opensource their drivers, you idiot?

      Because they can reduce the amount they have to spend on programmers, you idiot.

      Companies can't opensource everything and fuck themselves to the competition

      Yeah, because when your software only works on your hardware, you competition will surely scrap all of their own hardware, and reverse engineer your hardware (guaranteeing that they will forever be playing catch-up with you), so that they can save the money on writing the drivers themselves! Brilliant!

      Why do you think NVIDIA didn't opensource theirs?

      Because someone else owns part of it? nVidia leases some of their technology from other companies, and is therefore unable to release the source.

      Moron.

    17. Re:Let there be Linux support by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Can you feel the love? I know I can. It feels like bullets and killer bee venom.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    18. Re:Let there be Linux support by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      It happens. Espcially when you replace your keyboard more than once every five years.

      You wouldn't be running a pentium classic by any chance, would you?

      --
      It's been a long time.
    19. Re:Let there be Linux support by Sj0 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Please tell me why drivers, which by all accounts should simply jet textures, T&L info, and shader info off to their respective memory locations, could possibly make a company uncompetitive -- especially when they are selling me a chunk of silicon, rather than some piece of software? If it's because it could betray info on patents and such, I think that someone at ATI has a decent microscope if they REALLY want to learn how NVidias chips are made, and they also have a set of drivers of their own, as shocking and scandalous as it may sound...

      --
      It's been a long time.
    20. Re:Let there be Linux support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man - that was worthy of much more than a "1".
      Some people have no sense of humor.

    21. Re:Let there be Linux support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux users are at a point now that we can make or break a company, espically a new company like this

      Laughing
      My
      Fucking
      Ass
      Off
      !!!

      Linux stands a worse chance in the software market than you do of having sex with a living being of any species capable of defending itself.

    22. Re:Let there be Linux support by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, don't be so bitter... there are other jobs out there. I'm sure plenty of companies out there could use your talents at.. nothing?

      RIP Loki. A good idea, but for the wrong platform.

    23. Re:Let there be Linux support by Ancient+Devices+King · · Score: 1

      Drivers just ain't that simple. You have to CORRECTLY do all the stuff you listed and you have to do it QUICKLY. That's why the beta drivers for Radeon and GeForce cards make the cards suck, even though the cards perform fine when used with non-beta drivers. As for examining hardware, we're talking about chips which are fabbed at 130 NANO meters and which are multi-layered. You can't just "look at it under a microscope."

      --
      -"It seems like you're trying to exploit a security hole. Would you like help?"
    24. Re:Let there be Linux support by balloonhead · · Score: 1
      Although we still don't know if the outcome will be reduction to nothing or skyrocketing to success...

      Plus the opinions might be different between those who use their software and those who view their success as stock market increases.

      --
      This idea was invented by Shampoo.
    25. Re:Let there be Linux support by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      OK, it needs to get there correctly and quickly. How will it destroy nvidia if people know how they get it there correctly and quickly?

      And there are microscopes that can see individual atoms. I'm certain that 130NM wouldn't be a problem. ;)

      --
      It's been a long time.
  4. interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    thats pretty nice, hope they bring down prices... looks like their best will be priced at around $300. if it isn't a total flop, ATI and nvidia might face some competition. i'd sure like to get a high performance card for 300 or 350, and a nice midrange for around 100... we'll see. maybe a midrange card on sale might even go for $70. i've seen some 5600s @ $90, it could go down more

  5. Aren't you forgetting someone? by Pingular · · Score: 5, Informative

    A new player dares enters the graphics card market that ATi and Nvidia have dominated for so long
    What about Matrox, who've been dominating the multiple monitor graphics card market for years?

    --

    When anger rises, think of the consequences.
    Confucius (551 BC - 479 BC)
    1. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Oh man, now prepare for FPS boys, you used the evil Matrox word ;-)

      They dominate scientific market too... Especially Medical imaging...

      Perhelia is a hit amongst pro gfx people...

      But none of them will let you play Quake III in 500 fps

    2. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Uerige · · Score: 1

      Yes, Matrox have been there for a long time now. I always bought their cards, they were simply superior. Always a little behind in terms of performance, though. The last one of their cards that I bought was a G400. Why? All of the newer cards don't have linux/X11 support, none planned. It's a shame, because their G400 drivers were very good, and there is no other graphics hardware with good linux drivers. I think I can say that because my new card is an NVidia. Oh my god I am ranting again.

    3. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      The difference is that XGI makes dirt cheap slow parts, while Matrox makes ridiclously expensive slow parts.

      Seriously: it sounds like Matrox is going down the tubes. They recently downgraded their card from DX9 to DX8 and have been having major problems getting new driver releases out and dealing with game compatibility. There might be a handful of 2D applications that need Matrox cards, but it's not a good general purpose solution nor anything you should even try for gaming.

    4. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Ark42 · · Score: 4, Interesting



      I personally find NVidia's TwinView to work a lot better, if you have a card with two outputs, which most of the GF4s and higher seem to have now.

      We might as well ask about S3 if we're asking about Matrox. Remember that great card they had a while back?

      The best we can hope for is a pricewar I think. Cheaper Nvidia or ATI cards is always better.

    5. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by DeathPenguin · · Score: 1

      Matrox? I haven't seen a Matrox card in action for years. Nvidia's TwinView seems to be dominating that segment now.

      At least for people who care about performance, anyway.

    6. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Simon+Lyngshede · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Some of the newer cards does have Linux driver, but not as good as the G400 drivers. Matrox should have keept doing what they did right with the G400 series. Working 3D, Dualhead and TVout, oh and the driver was platform independent (Yes XFree86 allows platform independent drivers).

      If my G400 dies I wouldn't know what to buy, there are no videocard this good around anymore. The drivers are nothing short of excellent.

    7. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by RickHunter · · Score: 1

      Doubly-so since you can get the direct output drivers with mplayer, which make watching videos smooth as silk even on slower machines.

    8. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by reaperbean · · Score: 2, Informative

      Another company, S3, is back with a new line of cards here. They are also looking to break into the market this quarter.

      --
      Thinking is good, I think.
    9. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 5, Informative
      "What about Matrox [matrox.com], who've been dominating the multiple monitor graphics card market for years?"

      True. IMO Matrox is best for non-gaming applications. One thing a lot of people forget is that Matrox is a significant player in the digital video products that deal with video capture and real time editing. Their RT.X series of DV editing products are among the best in the price range.

    10. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Scooter · · Score: 1

      I dont think that was the graphics card market they were referring to. 3D rendering is the thing - I don't think Matrox have been competitive on that front for years.

    11. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Of course, for gaming ATI and nVidia are better but I've always had better experiences with Matrox for business and CAD apps.

      For most features on dual head, ATI, nV and Matrox are pretty close although there are two or three features that some people find rediculously handy.

      The one thing that Matrox can do that I haven't found in ATI or nVidia is to be able to have two signal outputs that are identical (dual head clone). That way I can have the exact same output for both my video projector and a 21" CRT display. For ATI and nvidia to do the same, one output has to be a TV-out and I don't think that's enough.

      I like the DVD view option where any program outputing to overlay acceleration automatically outputs full screen on the second monitor.

      If AVS forum is to be believed, nVidia is _still_ doing the poor output filtering with unacceptable halos and echoed edges. It showed very sorely on my projector so I ejected my Quadro2 from it very quickly.

      ATI is pretty nice but didn't have DVD Zoom or Dual Head clone.

    12. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by rsmith-mac · · Score: 4, Informative

      FYI, Diamond is not S3 any more. S3's core graphics division(i.e. the chip engineers) was merged with VIA, and the rest of S3 was sold piecemeal. Best Data bought the remainder of the graphics division(the names, the card designs, etc) and are relaunching Diamond MultiMedia as a video card company making ATI and Nvidia cards.

    13. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I still like Matrox cards. I prefer cards with great 2D performance to frame pushing 3D monsters, and I will not pay over 100 bucks for a card. Perfect card for me = great 2D performance, with beautiful color and clarity, I could not care less about Quake or UT, give me something that makes my eyes happe please.

    14. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by JayAndSilentBob · · Score: 1

      I have an eVga Geforce 4 MX 440 SE 64MB card with dual vga outs. the default is to clone the two monitors. I had to manually change it to spanning between them. From post to the XP desktop starting, the two are mirrored. Only when windows displays the desktop do they become spanned, and only because I told windows that's how I wanted them. As a side note, I had 2 of these cards with faulty ram before I exchanged for a working 3rd one. But the dual monitor thing is nice.

      --


      Love,
      Jay and Silent Bob
    15. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Amen. My last Matrox was a G400, after having a couple of 200s. Killer for 2D work. Marginal for 3D, but that wasn't my biggest concern. Matrox's lack of support for linux has pushed me away from them, just as the new motherboard I just ordered does NOT have nforce chips. I will be using an old g2 on that box (pure developmental box) because it was in the pile, and dont have a better one, but getting away from nvidia as fast as i can, too.

      Its not just matrox and nvidia tho, i just ordered 4 of the CR-53 boxes with via's 1ghz chip. great deal, good box, wont run linux for shit. Again, no decent support, even tho they say it will run Linux (yea, with a SVGA X server....) I am planning to buy a mid level ATI for this box asap, since they seem to support other OS's better. (mac, linux, etc). My only concern is the years of evidence that ATI drivers rather suck.

      If Matrox would just open up and produce some decent linux drivers, I would be very happy to use their products over anyone else.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    16. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      For analog video (CRTs) Matrox has always been the best as far as image quality.

      ATI and nVidia (traditionally) had horrible video quality (blurry edges, ghosted edges due to ringing, etc)

      Awhile back, I helped a friend of mine upgraded his video card to gain dual display. The first thing we tried (his first choice) was some type of GeForce4 card - it worked, and ran games plenty fast, but the image quality was not really that great particularly for high resolution desktops (Dual 19" Sony CRTs) and the cooling fan had a really annoying tone.

      Just for curiosity, we went back to the store and picked up an ATI Radeon (9500 Pro I believe.) The video quality for high resolution desktop was vastly superior to the nVidia card. Not only that, but the ATI card actually supported higher display resolutions than the nVidia! (I think the nVidia maxed out around 1600 where the ATI went up to something like 1920 and could drive both monitors at the highest supported resolution!) Games seemed to play equally well on the ATI card and the cooling fan wasnt so annoying.

      He ended up returning the nVidia and keeping the ATI.

      Now, for DVI output (to LCD displays) this is theoretically not a problem. With DVI the signal from the video card to the LCD is digital and you shouldn't have problems with blurry edges or ringing like you get when driving a CRT from a video card with crappy analog VGA outputs. So if you plan to use DVI, this comparison doesn't really apply to your application.

      Personally, I still use an old Matrox card to drive a 21" Sony CRT but if I were to upgrade, I would choose ATI based on the above experience.

    17. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Vanders · · Score: 1

      Matrox were also amoung the few companies which actually provided full specs for their hardware. You can register with them and download complete spec sheets from everything from the older-than-Millenium to the G450. I can't understand why they have suddenly clamed up when it comes to the Parhaliea. Apparently there are binary only, "beta" drivers for X/Linux but no specs or open drivers. Not much use.

    18. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Mattsson · · Score: 1

      But have you taken a look at their Parhelia HR256?
      Quad DVI interface to drive LCD's at 3840 x 2400 pixels... =)
      Now we're talking space!
      Ok, maybe not something for those gamers out there. Don't think that the Parhelia, or any other card, has the power to run any kind of game at reasonable speeds at those resolutions.
      But for any kind of serious work: WOW!
      I'd love one of these! =)

      --
      /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
    19. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by blixel · · Score: 1

      What about Matrox...

      Don't even get me started! :) I just ordered an ATI Radeon 9800 Pro to replace my Matrox Parhelia card. The linux drivers that are available for the Parhelia are lousy, not accelerated*, not officially supported (meaning if you can't make it work, tough luck), and only available for RedHat 9. (They might work with other distros but *I* (your milage may vary) couldn't get them to compile under Mandrake or Debian.)

      * If you ask politely, they'll e-mail you a link to an accelerated driver package that - in my experience - doesn't work.

      I'll miss the card with my Flight Simulator under Windows.

    20. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Threni · · Score: 1

      > But have you taken a look at their Parhelia HR256?

      Oh, sure. I need it for my bungholiooooo.

    21. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now where can I get a 3840x2400 LCD without selling both my kidneys?

    22. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by MrLizardo · · Score: 1

      I can get you the hook up. Meet me in the alley out back, and I'll need just _one_ kidney and half of your liver.

      -LizardMan

      --
      ^I'm with stupid.^
    23. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by 13Echo · · Score: 1

      ATI cards have excellent Linux drivers, binary or open. It's really weird because I'm not too fond of nVidia's Linux binaries. It's almost the opposite of the Windows platform, where nVidia dominates with excellent drivers.

    24. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by rekkanoryo · · Score: 1
      If you're running linux, why should you care whether or not ATI's binary drivers suck? Use the "radeon" driver from XFree86. The Gatos project also provides open-source drivers for ATI cards.

      I have not personally tried the Gatos project's drivers, but I find the XFree86 "radeon" driver to be rock-solid.

      Decent Radeons are getting cheap too. Just a couple weeks ago I purchased a 64MB DDR AGP4x/2x Radeon 7000 with TV out and both VGA and DVI outputs for $60, before the $30 mail-in rebate from TigerDirect.

      I should note I don't care about 3D performance as I'm not a gamer, so YMMV if you're going for 3D. Also, people bitch and moan about how horrid ATI's Windows drivers are, but in five years of owning nothing but ATI video cards I haven't had a minute's trouble with any of them. Nvidia, on the other hand...their drivers are so bad even in the Windows area that half the Windows games I used to play don't even display properly (parts of characters or objects missing, less than 30 fps, etc).

    25. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by 13Echo · · Score: 1

      VIA/S3 don't own DiamondMM anymore. BestData does.

      If you want to link to S3, it should be to S3Graphics.com

    26. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      I should note I don't care about 3D performance as I'm not a gamer, so YMMV if you're going for 3D. Also, people bitch and moan about how horrid ATI's Windows drivers are, but in five years of owning nothing but ATI video cards I haven't had a minute's trouble with any of them.

      Well, I game on windows, so the drivers really do matter alot. I have not used ATI in a while, used to love them, but their windows drivers (before 4 years ago) sucked ass. Very unstable while gaming. On the other hand, on Linux, I just want great 2D since there really are not many games out that use 3d on Linux yet. The $60 price range is exactly what I am looking at for this box. Like I said, i have a g2/mx400 with 64 megs, which is more than enough card, but I am wanting to get away from nvidia on linux, and hopefully windows, unless they open up their driver source.

      Keep in mind, all drivers are great, if you dont push them to the limits :D I do handling 100mb-400mb files in photoshop, and playing soldier of fortune 2. Both I do at the highest possible resolution, which is 1600x1200x32bit for 2d, and 1280x1024x32bit for 3d (FPS sucks above that). This usually seperates good from bad pretty fast, when you are watching blocky redraws in photoshop, or get corruption. The task bar is usually the first to go, then the icons all disappear, and then all your windows......

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    27. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Mattsson · · Score: 1

      You can't. That's part of the deal if you want one of these beauties.
      But selling *both* your kidneys is a really stupid idea.
      Better go with one kidney and one lung.
      Come on, you *know* you don't need redundancy! =)

      --
      /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
    28. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by rekkanoryo · · Score: 1

      2048x1536@24 or 32 bpp in 2D is possible on Radeons with no problems. In fact, ATI claims that 2048x1536@32bpp is maintainable in 3D with decent FPS rates, although most of their cards currently support 2048x1536 resolution at 60Hz (not like that bothers me, though; refresh rates higher than 65 Hz hurt my eyes). IIRC, Sony's 22-inch Trinitron monitors handle that resolution splendidly. I, personally, can't wait for 2048x1536 LCD displays!

    29. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Nvidia, on the other hand...their drivers are so bad even in the Windows area that half the Windows games I used to play don't even display properly (parts of characters or objects missing, less than 30 fps, etc).


      There must have been something seriously wrong with your setup, either on your PCs side, or on the video cards side. I've been running nvidias for years now, on a wide variety of hardware and software platforms, and I've never had the slightest problem with their software. The biggest problem I ever had was the fact that MSI mucked up their BIOS, so I had to reflash it later on because the video-out was messed up.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    30. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Sj0 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      S3 has never had a good card. Ever. If you think they did, it's because you hadn't used another card at the time. They all suck, are cheap, are worthless, and have bad drivers.

      Let's sum up, shall we?

      Pre-3d cards:Sucked, cheap, worthless.
      ViRGE:Sucked, cheap, worthless, bad drivers,ugly rendering.
      ViRGE DX:Sucked, cheap, worthless, bad drivers, ugly rendering.
      ViRGE GX:Sucked, cheap, worthless, bad drivers, ugly rendering.
      ViRGE DX/2,GX/2:Sucked, cheap, worthless, bad drivers, ugly rendering.
      Trio GX2/DX2:Sucked, cheap, worthless, bad drivers, ugly rendering.
      Savage3D:Sucked, cheap, worthless, bad drivers.
      Savage4:Sucked, cheap, worthless, bad drivers.
      Savage2000:Sucked, cheap, worthless, bad drivers, useless T&L.

      Any questions?

      --
      It's been a long time.
    31. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, one question:

      If the Savage4 was so terrible, why did nVidia bother to rip of S3TC?

    32. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by eatdave13 · · Score: 1

      nVidia supports cloning to two VGA adapters, at least my ti 4600 does.

      --
      "Verbing weirds language." -- Calvin
    33. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But none of them will let you play Quake III in 500 fps

      Correction. None of them will let you play pretty much anything, at any framerate. And let's face it, gaming drives the gfx card market for the masses. Practicality is the new niche market.

    34. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by mcpkaaos · · Score: 1

      Bah, more rebranded video cards. When are they relauching all those low ping Quake servers?!

      --
      It goes from God, to Jerry, to me.
    35. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by anthony_philipp · · Score: 1

      i'm sure you could find another one on ebay.

    36. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by rsmith-mac · · Score: 1

      That was spun off some time ago(2000 or so) as HomeLAN.

    37. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by clarkc3 · · Score: 1
      Matrox? I haven't seen a Matrox card in action for years. Nvidia's TwinView seems to be dominating that segment now.

      Don't think you pay too much attention then to that segment. Look at professional video editors (non 3d) - they pretty much all use matrox and have been for years, with very few companies making a dent in that niche. Their multiple monitor support is far superior to anything on the market including nVidia

    38. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Becaue s3tc was good technology. The savage4 was not. The Ford Pinto no doubt had some interesting technological innovations, but that doesn't mean it's a good car.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    39. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I discovered that when I last needed to find S3 drivers. Finally scrounged some off a neglected FTP site somewhere in deepest Russia.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    40. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I have a bunch of Matrox G200 cards that I really like. Very stable drivers, cards and drivers get along with everything, and none of them has ever given me a bit of trouble. The only drawback is that the fastest system they seem able to keep up with is about a P3-500. So when I build my next new box, I'll have to find something else. But I will be looking first at whatever Matrox is offering at the time.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    41. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by AmbyVoc · · Score: 1
      Damn, I've yet to see anything smooth with Matrox G400 even with the latest XFree releases. 2D is jumpy, 3d works sometimes, and often not. Mplayer doesn't work at all. This on Gentoo.
      open: No such file or directory
      vo_mga: Couldn't open /dev/mga_vid
      open: No such file or directory
      vo_mga: Couldn't open /dev/mga_vid

      This happens every time. It doesn't even matter if I recompile mgavideo package and/or xfree86.. And OpenGL, it works, sometimes... glxgears seems to work, trackballs seems to work, but many gl2 stuff seems to either lock down the X or make it smur up the output.

      --
      - Voice of Ambience -
    42. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Ark42 · · Score: 1

      The savage 2000 was the great card I was thiking of. Did they ever come out with drivers to ever enable the T&L or was that just a joke.
      Maybe the chip never even had T&L features and they just lied about it.

    43. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by justinarthur · · Score: 1

      On the subject of other graphics card contenders, what about 3D-Labs, home of some of the world's most powerful graphics cards? Something tells me that 3D-Labs' Wildcat4 7210 offering 4 monitor outputs, 384 MB DDR RAM, and allegedely decent linux support is something worthy of notation. While the average price of a 3D-Labs card isn't consumer level, they are still in competition with ATI, nVidia, et al. in the field of professional quality graphics cards.

    44. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Uerige · · Score: 1

      It seems like you've forgotten to insmod mga_vid?
      My experience with my G400 is the following under linux: Install XFree86, choose 'mga' driver, start quake. I've not had any troubles, plus I didn't have to download and compile drivers that only work with a specific kernel version for some reason.

    45. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      Obviously, the moderator who modded me hasn't ever owned an S3. As a former owner of both an S3 ViRGE GX and a Savage4, I can tell you things as they really are.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    46. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by GeckoX · · Score: 1

      Ah, so because the parhelia doesn't meet your extremely specific needs, then it must just be crap ehh?

      You should have asked, I would have told you right up front, as would most people whom know anything about current graphics cards, that the parhelia is NOT the right card for YOUR needs, so don't bother.

      --
      No Comment.
    47. Re:Aren't you forgetting someone? by blixel · · Score: 1

      Ah, so because the parhelia doesn't meet your extremely specific needs, then it must just be crap ehh?

      At what point did I say the card was crap? I didn't even insinuate it was crap.

  6. Tom's Hardware by stone2020 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Did Slashdot just discover Tom's Hardware this week?

    1. Re:Tom's Hardware by sirsampson · · Score: 4, Funny

      Well, seems as though slashdot doesn't even know about slashdot. Just look at all the dupe stories.

    2. Re:Tom's Hardware by Pingular · · Score: 1

      Did Slashdot just discover Tom's Hardware this week?
      No.

      --

      When anger rises, think of the consequences.
      Confucius (551 BC - 479 BC)
    3. Re:Tom's Hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, but Tom just discovered CmdrTaco's PayPal account.

    4. Re:Tom's Hardware by balloonpup · · Score: 1

      I've been looking for a good hardware review site. What would you suggest?

      --
      I sing the doggie electric!
    5. Re:Tom's Hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, seems as though slashdot doesn't even know about slashdot.

      Thanks god, you seem to know something about it! I googled for half an hour for this Slashdot and finally found your posting in this obscure forum here. Now I'm at the end of my tether - can you please give me a pointer!

    6. Re:Tom's Hardware by PReDiToR · · Score: 1

      No, my first (and only) submission was from Tom's =)

      If I remember rightly, it was abotu 7200rpm laptop drives.

      --

      Do not meddle in the affairs of geeks for they are subtle and quick to anger
    7. Re:Tom's Hardware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      xbitlabs is good for general-purpose. overclockers.com has a useful HSF database. AnandTech is pretty good for general-purpose reviews. SharkyExtreme sometimes has useful buying guide suggestions.

    8. Re:Tom's Hardware by AlaskanUnderachiever · · Score: 1

      What kind of hardware? overclockers.com is pretty good for that sort of thing. What they review they review in a fairly even handed way. Dan's Data reviews a lot of fairly interesting equipment and while he IS biased towards his sponsor he comes out and says it. A good chunk of his products are from other companies tho. Anandtech has decent reviews. I tend to stay away from hardocp these days, they've been getting preachy and I find the way they handled false reporting pretty underhanded. Tom's Hardware is definately a piece of crap when it comes to reviews.

      --
      Find out about my new childrens book: SS Death Camp Criminal Batallion Go To Monte Carlo For The Massacre
    9. Re:Tom's Hardware by TheHawke · · Score: 1

      http://www.hardocp/com

      --
      First rule of holes; When in one, stop digging.
    10. Re:Tom's Hardware by Sivar · · Score: 1

      This is largely a matter of opinion. I like www.aceshardware.com, www.ArsTechnica.com, www.anandtech.com, and sometimes check www.hardocp.com. (They don't make any effort to be professional or business-like, but that's what I like about them). There are probably many other good ones, but these are the ones that I check often. YMMV.

      --
      Computer Science is no more about computers than astronomy is about telescopes. --E. W. Dijkstra
    11. Re:Tom's Hardware by 10Ghz · · Score: 1

      For 3D, the best site (by far) is Beyond3D.

      --
      Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
  7. Variety, Nvidia and 3dfx by dolo666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I remember when Nvidia came into big production, and a lot of us Voodoo owners were skeptical at first that anyone could oppose the great Voodoo cards from 3dfx (the same cardies that revolutionized how we all play Quake). Smart business policy, quality hardware and lots of blood, sweat and tears have pushed Nvidia to where it is today. As a gamer, I welcome any new blood to the table, because it just means that the race for the mother of all graphics suites is getting that much more interesting... and the road is shorter when the competition is fierce!

    Competition is the mother of invention, if necessity can't possibly be. :)

    Seems that XGI is going after some odd designs, using the fabled 3dfx dual chip design as a way to get more bang for the buck. It's not a solution, as Tom's Hardware reveals that this results in more problems. The problem? Half-norm memory usage. *ouch*!

    Still, this is the first line for XGI. I'm sure we'll see a lot more from them, if they don't go broke.

    1. Re:Variety, Nvidia and 3dfx by sirsampson · · Score: 1

      Ahh, yes, price wars :) One can only hope.

    2. Re:Variety, Nvidia and 3dfx by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      3dfx suxxored. Heather has two mommies.

    3. Re:Variety, Nvidia and 3dfx by Space+cowboy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree with most of that. I'm not sure the memory thing is an issue at the moment though - memory is dirt cheap. Huge chips are more than 2x the cost of smaller ones, for only 1.5x the transistor count...

      I dunno. Could be a shrewd move, could be a monumental screwup :-)

      Simon.

      --
      Physicists get Hadrons!
    4. Re:Variety, Nvidia and 3dfx by ashkar · · Score: 1

      I still have my voodoo 1 if anybody wants to purchase it. It's great for games like Quake and...uhm...Quake...eh...did I mention how good GLQuake looks?

    5. Re:Variety, Nvidia and 3dfx by John+Courtland · · Score: 1

      More memory == more latency, because of power distribution. Unless it's registered, but that drives up costs and power comsumption (and therefore heat) and runs a cycle slower per transfer than non-registered, I believe.

      It would be nice to see a graphics card that could utilize system memory using an AMD-64 style setup (built in on-die mem controller) at the same speed as the processor does. I would be more than willing to buy an extra 512MB and dedicate that to video (much like the aperture setting in the BIOS) than have the card running on a bottlenecked AGP port.

      --
      Slashdot is proof that Sturgeon's Law applies to mankind.
    6. Re:Variety, Nvidia and 3dfx by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I welcome any new blood to the table, because it just means that the race for the mother of all graphics suites is getting that much more interesting... and the road is shorter when the competition is fierce!

      Absolutely. Competition is a great thing. I often wonder where x86 processors would be at without AMD forcing Intel to move ahead. Probably about the same place Mac's are at. No - that's not a jab - it's the truth. (Spare me your G5 64 bit B.S. Even Adobe isn't buying it.)

    7. Re:Variety, Nvidia and 3dfx by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One word: UltraHLE.

  8. Re: No drivers by hendridm · · Score: 0

    Not to worry, they don't post drivers on their web site anyway :P

  9. Drivers by Indio_do_Xingu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The most difficult thing is to release good drivers. Until then, I will wait to see how they really perform.

  10. Relief thy name is XGI by Chris_Stankowitz · · Score: 4, Insightful
    From the article: Of course, there are no official comments on who is pulling the strings, but it seems clear that XGI is on solid financial ground.

    And that is all I really wanted to hear. Thank goodness they won't be a fly-by-night company. This is a very welcome addition to the market. Lets also hope that they either make linux drivers or open the arch so developers can do so.

    The great thing about new companies with financial legs to stand on is that they can learn from the mistakes of others without having to make them themselves as well as learn from the things done right by other companies.

    I for one welcome our future (their mission statement is to be #1 by 2007) GPU overlords!

    1. Re:Relief thy name is XGI by jejones · · Score: 1

      This page claims that they will support Linux for the Volari V3, and elsewhere they claim to have a "unified" driver, so I would think that means there will be Linux support, if not open source drivers.

  11. crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't get this troll. Can we retire it to the archives, please? I like the style of the Macintosh "20 minutes to copy a file" troll better, and it lures many more people in.

    Thanks,
    mgmt.

  12. mynuts won: another storIE about almost nothing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sum of what the corepirate nazi execrable, &/or their very owned /.puppets have to offer?

    lookout bullow. tell 'em robbIE?

  13. Re:Another nail in the coffin for SGI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    YOU FUCKING RETARD!

    SGI does not run Windows! It runs IRIX. Not every motherfucking computer in the universe runs Windows! In fact, all the best computers run something else than Windows, so suck it up and learn something before you come here with us professionals and start spouting crap like that!

    Fucking 'tard.

  14. Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by W2k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't foresee this going very well for XGI. Firstly, look at the cards. Dual chips, non-shared memory? 256 megs on the card, only 128 available because the chips can't share. "Wasting" 128 megs might be acceptable, considering the card is still pretty cheap, but how about when high-end cards start coming with 512 MB or more? If XGI start putting 1024 MB of memory on their cards they are going to see any advantages their cards may have in pricing go bye-bye pretty quickly. Remember, going for quantity rather than quality was what killed 3dfx. How quickly some people forget :)

    Second problem is that due to the size of the card, it's not gonna fit in smaller form-factor PC's. Why they put such a huge HS on the back of the card, where there's usually not much space, versus just putting more cooling on the front of the card, where high-end users (of nVidia cards, anyway) are already accustomed to leaving a PCI slot open to make room, is beyond me.

    Those two big fans they've stuck on their reference board sure aren't going help keep noise levels down, either. My (reference) Radeon 9800 Pro still beats the crap out of most cards on the market today, and it's only got a small HSF for the chipset and nothing on the memory chips. And I was still able to OC it quite a bit. If nVidia's and XGI's chips really require as much cooling as manufacturers stick on them, even on "reference" boards, they must be very inefficient chips indeed. These things aside, it's always nice to see more competition in the graphics chipset business, hopefully prices might come down a bit as a result if ATi and/or nVidia see XGI as a real contenter, rather than a wannabe like Matrox (though I don't know if they're even at the "wannabe" level any longer, considering how poor their chips are nowadays).

    --
    Quality, performance, value; you get only two, and you don't always get to pick.
    1. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by mobby_6kl · · Score: 0

      > Dual chips...
      I guess they managed to steal some VSA100 chips from the ashes of 3Dfx ;)

    2. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      "Second problem is that due to the size of the card, it's not gonna fit in smaller form-factor PC's. Why they put such a huge HS on the back of the card, where there's usually not much space, versus just putting more cooling on the front of the card, where high-end users (of nVidia cards, anyway) are already accustomed to leaving a PCI slot open to make room, is beyond me."

      It's because they have half of the RAM on the back of the cards as well, and since it's DDR2 (which, right now, is quite cheap since no one had really been using the stockpile that NVIDIA created with the NV30 because GDDR3 is on the horizon), it requires cooling on the RAM. NVIDIA is doing the same thing with their 5700 Ultra reference design. However, they have a rather small backplate. Pretty nice.

      Looking at the Volari card now, it doesn't seem that much bigger than the 5700 Ultra engineering sample or the GF4 Ti4600 engineering sample I have sitting around. Engineering samples are generally 2-3 inches longer than their retail counterparts because of extra capacitors on the cards (why those capacitors are there, I don't know, but they most certainly are).

    3. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      About those extra caps.... It's very simple. Modern high speed logic behaves more like RF circuitry than just 1s and 0s. In the fast turnaround/low profit margin world of these cards, it's easier to add lots of extra capacitors ahead of time, then remove them one by one while testing for EMI/RFI/noise problems. Keeps the cost down, and you don't need to buy 50000$ RF simulation software with a PhD to run it. Another example of how real-world considerations make university educations questionable in the future.

    4. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by pantherace · · Score: 1
      Ok, Nvidia/ATI has some drawbacks compared to Matrox and other highend makers. It may kill them on Price/Performance, but people buy CPUs with crappy price performance (Xeon, P4EE (well theoreticly at least!)) when they could get chips with a much better price/performance ratio.

      Matrox & other professional cards simply look better for most things, and Nvidia doesn't support some things sub-pixel antialiasing.

      An example of this: http://www.3dlabs.com/product/technology/Wildcat_Q uality_ro.doc (It's a .doc I know, but open office opens it fine) (note the lack of a matrox card, and that nvidia and ati have improved from this, but it still has problems)

    5. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by BrookHarty · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Remember, going for quantity rather than quality was what killed 3dfx. How quickly some people forget :)

      Well, I disagree. The reason 3DFX was killed off, the partners decided that they wanted to be the only vendor for 3dfx boards, they killed off all 3rd party vendors. Then they bought STB so they could release boards, and that never panned out. So with the 3DFX limited release, nvidia expanded with new OEM partners, and easily took over the market. Vendors need to release boards, even if cheap OEM boards, they need a product to fill. 3DFX took that away from all the smaller companies. And believe it or not, lots of people buy OEM quality products. Even CompUSA and main stores carry an OEM selection selection with a sticker on the box to make it look retail.

      3DFX could of lasted another 2 years with the multi-gpu design, and had another GPU in development. The Partners tanked the company, sold few a few million, and walked away. They had better visual quality at the time. OpenGL was a little flaky, but could of been fixed with drivers, they had a great developteam that moved on to other GFX companies.

      I had a Voodoo5 and a GF3-ti500 both the hottest cards out at the time. The Voodoo5 with only 2 CPU's kept up almost every game. But after the drivers stopped from 3DFX, you had to move to different hardware.

      This is where Sis+Trident=XGI can rock. Trident has been making OEM chipsets for years, Sis makes motherboard chipsets. With a good design, and to use Multi-GPU's to make boards faster, they can cut a good niche out of the low end market.

      ATI and NVidia use the same CPU cores for most boards, they just cripple and use the GPU's that dont pass high end tests. This is why when the ATI 9500 came out, you could driver hack it to a 9700. Also they use less expensive ram, and limit the hardware. This doesnt exactly save that much money, a few bux, but the selling price can be 50-100 dollars more. Most people wont spend 400 bux on a high end GFX card, but the 99 dollar sweet spot is a big field, and if XGI can come up with a card to fill that niche, they could come out as the heavy hitter and take over some major piece of the market.

      Also, back in the .com days, SIS, Trident made most of the low end, SVGA cards that powered almost every server I seen. Until Intel started putting gfx chips on boards. They have the background, and with the man power out in the market right now, they could easily take 10-15% of the market on Initial release.

      Of course, after reading the article, 300 bux release, and not the top preformer, they better tweak the hell out of those drivers. Maybe multi-core could help, but it at the performance of the 9500/5700, it needs a little more performance. Maybe driver tweaks, since its still beta could bump it up. Nvidia and ATI are already tweaking the drivers like crazy if you watch the benchmarks out everymonth, so tweaking and optimizing drivers does help.

      -
      Power by Nvidia, pfft. Spend more time fixing bugs, and less time suckling on the nvidia tit...

    6. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      After an extended conversation with a prior 3dfx employee, I learned that every chip they made for the enthusiast market was a place holder for the next gen processor. So that means Voodoo2, Voodoo3, Voodoo5 were all an effort to keep the performance lead while trying to implement a new architecture, which never saw the light of day. Their lack of execution appears to be what destroyed the company more than any other factor.

      Another note on dual chip configurations: they are not all created equal. Ati's 'Maxx' did in fact cache one entire frame of video for each chip, but chip level sli aka Voodoo5 would separate the workload down to every other pixel. What this would mean for capacity is that only the only the framebuffer was coppied 'x' number of times. In the case of 10x7x32 that is about 7 megs wasted, not half the memory capacity!

    7. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      3DFX could of lasted another 2 years

      I stopped reading there. It's "could have", not "could of." You should check your resume to see if it contains any more of these gems. It could explain why you haven't landed that great job. You look like an idiot when you "don't write good."

    8. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by BrookHarty · · Score: 0

      I stopped reading there. It's "could have", not "could of." You should check your resume to see if it contains any more of these gems.

      Right, should have caught that grammatical error. But that doesnt make my post invalid. But glad someone is out there watching for mistakes, heaven knows slashdot needs more AC's like you to point that out.

      It could explain why you haven't landed that great job. You look like an idiot when you "don't write good."

      Working as the snot nosed grammer nazi on slashdot was taken. Heres your cookie.

    9. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by afidel · · Score: 1

      Actually 3dfx SLI stood for scan line interleave, meaning that each chip rendered every other line, not every other pixel. For the 4 chip cards each chip did every fourth line.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    10. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Snot - nosed.
      Gramm a r.
      N azi. (Capitalization Counts!)
      Here ' s.

    11. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Right, should have caught that grammatical error

      And the myraid of others?

      But that doesnt make my post invalid

      You are correct, sir! Your lack of insight and depth of knowledge handled that daunting, little task for you.

      Working as the snot nosed grammer nazi on slashdot was taken

      Actually, no. We told you that for the reason that if you were the proofer for the site, you'd have everyone sounding like some inbred pro wrestling fan within a few days. That part backfired, apparently, as everyone pretty much already does sound like an inbred pro wrestling fan around here. Oh well, c'est la vie.

    12. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by saintlupus · · Score: 1

      And the myraid of others?

      Myriad isn't a noun. Cock.

      --saint

    13. Re:Going from the beginning to where nVidia failed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Merriam-Webster OnLine seems to disagree:


      Main Entry: 1myriad
      Pronunciation: 'mir-E-&d
      Function: noun
      Etymology: Greek myriad-, myrias, from myrioi
      countless, ten thousand
      Date: 1555
      1 : ten thousand
      2 : a great number

  15. XGI isn't new, its trident and Xabre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    XGI is just Trident with a new name, and Xabre added in

    From webpage:

    'Founded in May of 2003 and headquartered in Taipei, Taiwan, XGI pulls from a deep reservoir of engineering and design talent stemming from its acquisitions of Trident Microsystems, and Silicon Integrated Systems' graphics divisions.'

    Although it says Taipei, most of the hard core engineers are in san jose, in the old trident building, right across from Fry's electronics. Go say hi, they're a nice bunch

    1. Re:XGI isn't new, its trident and Xabre by platipusrc · · Score: 1

      Yeah, parent is informative. Just about as informative as the second paragraph of the linked article, which some people may have overlooked in the journey to mod ;)

      --
      And the muscular cyborg German dudes dance with sexy French Canadians
    2. Re:XGI isn't new, its trident and Xabre by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The rank-and-file may be nice people but I don't remember any Trident or SIS graphics chip living up to the hype so they end up getting relegated to the budget market.

      I wish them luck, but I hope that they have something up their sleeves to fix all the defficiencies found in Tom's testing.

    3. Re:XGI isn't new, its trident and Xabre by Master+Bait · · Score: 1
      Righto. XGI will be irrelevant in the Windows because of price/performance compared to the lower-end ATI and Nvidia parts. It could become relevant in the Linux world if they had open source drivers or if they simply would release specs for programming the chips. They haven't so far, so even with a promised binary X11 driver, they're destined for the scrap heap of Chapter 11 video card companies.

      --
      "Only in their dreams can men truly be free 'twas always thus, and always thus will be."
      --Tom Schulman
    4. Re:XGI isn't new, its trident and Xabre by Dr+Reducto · · Score: 1

      But remember that Linux only has a very small market-share (5%). Also, remember that open-source zealots who browse slashdot all day are not representative of the Population value of all people who might buy a video card.

    5. Re:XGI isn't new, its trident and Xabre by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only geeks spend $300 on a video card. Lusers use onboard video for a few years, decide the whole box is "too slow" or "obsolete", and buy a new machine (or the IT department does so automatically).

    6. Re:XGI isn't new, its trident and Xabre by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the heads-up... now I know to avoid 'em:)

      I used to like Trident-based video cards in the Olden Daze (we're talking 386/486 here), but in the Pentium era, have found Trident-based products are very slow compared even to other budget video cards. And I've always found SiS-based motherboards to be relatively buggy/unstable.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    7. Re:XGI isn't new, its trident and Xabre by aminorex · · Score: 1

      > 5%

      I just don't believe that. Where do you get it?

      If XGI *only* sold to IBM, they'd be in the black.
      How many Linux graphic heads does IBM own?

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
  16. Whoa!! by garglblaster · · Score: 5, Funny
    ..XGIs top model Volari Duo V8 Ultra

    WOW!!

    but - wait a minute - guess I'll wait for the Volari Quattro Triplex V12 Turbo GTI XXL
    _ThAT'll be a nice graphics card!

    --

    perl -e 'printf("%x!\n",49153)'

    1. Re:Whoa!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you're not going to get the Type-R model??

    2. Re:Whoa!! by XO · · Score: 1

      Ya know, I actually think that the names of the parts are the coolest part, so far. The benchmarks and screenshots definitely left something to be desired.

      Namely, quality and efficiency.

      Then again, I'm still using a Radeon 7000 PCI, and a Voodoo3 in my two computers. So.. I can't bitch much.

      --
      "Champagne for my real friends - and real pain for my sham friends!" http://ericblade.postalboard.com/
    3. Re:Whoa!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the Type R addon

    4. Re:Whoa!! by flewp · · Score: 1

      Apparently you aren't the Type R anonymous coward version, as you were a full four minutes slower than the previous AC mentioning the Type R.

      --
      WWJD.... for a Klondike bar?
    5. Re:Whoa!! by Fancia · · Score: 1

      I'm holding out for Super Voltari Alpha Zero III', myself.

      --

      Bít, zabít, jen proto, ze su liska!
    6. Re:Whoa!! by leerpm · · Score: 1

      Yeah, with the huge NEUSPEED sticker to stick across the CD drive opening on the front of the computer.

      "But.. but.. it will make my car^H^H^Hcomputer go faster!"

    7. Re:Whoa!! by paradesign · · Score: 1
      why wait, SGIs already ship with V12 graphics.

      See. Theyre not cheap though.

      --
      I want 2D games back.
    8. Re:Whoa!! by Stonent1 · · Score: 1

      ..XGIs top model Volari Duo V8 Ultra WOW!! but - wait a minute - guess I'll wait for the Volari Quattro Triplex V12 Turbo GTI XXL _ThAT'll be a nice graphics card!?

      Sounds like the marketting divisions of Audi and Alfa Romeo had a child out of wedlock.

    9. Re:Whoa!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shit sandwich.

    10. Re:Whoa!! by crazysim · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the "TYPE R" !

    11. Re:Whoa!! by yomegaman · · Score: 1

      Sorry, "Quattro" is already taken by this exciting new high-tech product.

      --
      ...wearing a skin-tight topless leather jumpsuit, with cutaway buttocks and transparent crotch panel.
  17. won 'man's' p00pIE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is yet another's mynuts won: i don't get it.

    thanks,

    ppr team

  18. GL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    do they even do opengl, on the first pages of the article, no mention of it.

    1. Re:GL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They did UT2k3 benchmarks.

    2. Re:GL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't that a D3D game?

  19. Arh! by FrostedWheat · · Score: 1

    external video bridge chip SIS301 MV, which is also responsible for the TV output

    Why oh why do companies insist on using SiS's chips for TV out! It's horrible!! VIA used them on the Epia boards, and it stinks! Great little boards don't get me wrong, but it's TV out is nasty. Now these guys. Will the pain never end??!

    [/sis rant]

    But good luck to them :) Competition is good!

    1. Re:Arh! by Bob+of+Dole · · Score: 1

      Maybe because they ARE SiS?

    2. Re:Arh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SiS's chipsets are great, and even their TV-out chips can't stink nearly as bad as anything VIA touches. That company is like a digital plague of locusts.

    3. Re:Arh! by FrostedWheat · · Score: 1

      SiS's chipsets are great, and even their TV-out chips can't stink nearly as bad as anything VIA touches

      Hello from Earth.

      Watching a DVD through SiS's TV out chip is more painful than watching it through mplayers libaa output.

      I used to own a Savage 3D .. so I should know :)

    4. Re:Arh! by Reziac · · Score: 1

      I've learned that when I see SiS chipsets on a motherboard, I should run away screaming now, rather than run screaming in pain later. Buggy and unstable!

      Which is kinda weird considering that back in the era of slot-based IDE controllers (in 486s and before), the ones with SiS chipsets were the most reliable.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    5. Re:Arh! by FrostedWheat · · Score: 1

      Yep, the world is truly backwards now.

      My current computer has an AMD CPU, VIA based motherboard, ATi video card and a Seagate HDD.

      A few years ago I wouldn't even have considered those brands, even laughed at someone who bought them. AMD was always second place to Intel, VIA was unstable and had nasty onboard audio, ATi was buggy and Seagate made the loudest drives on the planet.

      Now AMD is the top for CPU, VIA are ... improving (still bad onboard audio! .. and they use SiS for TV-out), ATi's cards are great and Seagate make the quietest drives on the planet!

      Yeesh. Next thing you know Transmeta will have the fastest CPU or something ...

    6. Re:Arh! by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Eeek!! [g] I've become an Intel CPU and chipset bigot thru hard experience (my own and the observed pain of others). I don't care about the bang-for-the-buck or overclocking factors, I care far more about stability in every environment. My ATI video cards have been a mixed bag -- I've got some that work fine, and one that, no shit, makes system speed randomly go up and down!! (ATI had no idea what was wrong. It's not a driver issue -- it does this even in plain DOS.) But the ATIs all seem a little sluggish compared to my concurrent S3 and Matrox cards, and I don't like the ATI drivers much. And I've got a variety of HD makes here, which have contributed mightily to my habit of *buying* only W.D. :)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    7. Re:Arh! by FrostedWheat · · Score: 1

      I do like Intel don't get me wrong. My last two machines where both Intel based, CPU and chipset. At the time I was buying this machine Intel where still insisting on using only RDRAM, so I avoided it. Glad I did now because it's becoming difficult and expensive to get RDRAM in the UK. Things have changed now tho, and my next machine might just be an Intel again.

      I used to have an S3 card ... evil it was. The only time it was stable was in text mode, so it's now running in a Linux file server. It had nasty SiS TV-out which is where my hate for them came from *g*

      I've had W.D. drives fail here also :) Infact the only brand that hasn't failed (so far) is Seagate. I have a couple of really old Maxtors that are going well but I find that most of Maxtors drives get very very hot and they are quite noisy. What's the WD's like sound wise? I can't remember, been a while since I had one.

    8. Re:Arh! by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Ah, RDRAM, that's your excuse :) I decided to just skip the upgrade thing until something more generic came along; RDRAM was too expensive and looked to me like a dead end. Turns out I never did upgrade so the hottest machine here is still the P3-550. Maybe next year, or the year after :)

      I and a friend both had evil experiences with fatally-buggy AMD CPUs that AMD would not warranty (my friend got inside info from an AMD tech, and despite AMD's denials, it was indeed a bug), and for a while I tracked CPU vs complaints of Windows instability in one of the WinXP newsgroups. Turned out even tho AMD had only about 10% of the CPU market, AMD-based systems generated about 70% of the complaints, and a big chunk of those (not all) were VIA-based to boot. Me, I prefer stability!!

      I've had good luck with S3Trio and Virge cards -- nice fast inexpensive business card, real stable, no issues. However those under the Diamond label were nothing but trouble -- crap drivers, ran hot, lots of fails compared to other cards.

      Seagate seems to be like the little girl with the curl -- their HDs either last forever or die in droves. After they bought Conner (whose HDs were mostly rebadged Samsung crap) I saw "Seagate" HDs that if you get 'em to report their real identity, are actually refurbed Conners. So I expect there is a big dip in quality at that point, at least in their consumer drives.

      In my observation for consumer-class HDs: Maxtor -- decent performance, but high death rates; those I've encountered run no hotter than average; not so much noisy as that the sound they do make can be in an annoyingly high range. Seagate -- some of 'em you can cook on, bit noisy during read/write ops tho not bad otherwise; VERY slow thruput compared to concurrent W.D. Quantum -- about like Seagate tho higher death rate (you don't see many old Maxtor nor old Quantum HDs). W.D. -- most are relatively cool and quiet (I have a bunch, and the only one I've given extra cooling is a 40g -- it's not one of their best efforts), and they use fewer CPU cycles than other IDE HDs. Their faint buzzing is often not audible over case fans, and being lower-pitched is not particularly annoying even when running with the cover off.

      If a W.D. is going to fail, it will usually do so either very early in life (first month or two), or after a good 5 years of hard work, and with ample warning (frex, nasty noises); consequently I've never lost any data from a W.D. that failed. Also, as a rule they don't just die; they can usually be resurrected long enough to extract all the data. Consequently I buy W.D. for myself and for clients.

      In fact, one W.D. that had a brief problem right off but that I didn't bother RMA'ing, I got four years of 24/7 use from before it went tits-up; another that got headcrashed during a move at age two, ran four more years 24/7 before I finally had to retire it due to the creeping crud. I've got several here that had been declared dead but after a couple judicious thwacks, now work fine again. Conversely, I've not been able to resurrect sticky/cranky HDs of other brands. And I *hate* giving up on sick hardware until it's quite definitely dead and rotting. :)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  20. Vortex drivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/openvortex/

    1. Re:Vortex drivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yippee, thanks. I thought their download area was especially useful. Any chance they'll be Windows drivers? I doubt it.

    2. Re:Vortex drivers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OpenVortex is great, and I entirely plan to blag the Vortex2 which is currently in my work PC, but it took something like 3 years to reverse engineer the closed, We're-Creative-and-we-dont-release-specs Aureal drivers. The sods.

      Closed source drivers are bad.

  21. Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by King_TJ · · Score: 1, Interesting

    IMHO, don't expect a miracle. Don't forget, long-standing, legitimate graphics card makers (such as Matrox, or years ago - Hercules) all tried to get into the high-end 3D type accelerator card market and failed miserably. Even lately, you hear some rumbling coming from Matrox every once in a while about some new "killer 3D card", and it always turns out to effectively mean nothing.

    ATI and nVidia being the only 2 real competitors in the 3D gaming card market isn't such a horrible thing. (Yes, things would be MUCH worse if we only had ONE major player.) As long as there are two, it keeps innovation and competition alive between them - and it reduces the support headaches for software developers.

    It wasn't THAT long ago, you almost had to select your 3D card purchase based on how much you liked the "special edition" titles bundled in the box - because you never knew how many future games would actually be written to support the thing! (I recall buying a Matrox Mystique like this, for example. It came with a Mystique-accelerated version of MechWarrior and a few other decent games - but I barely found anything else that supported it afterwards.)

    The old line about "too many cooks spoiling the soup" holds true for too many competing brands on the video card marketplace, too.

  22. open GL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    not mentioned on the first pages of the article...

  23. Re:Another nail in the coffin for SGI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, maybe not a recent version of Windows anyway.

  24. Dont feed the trolls by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    Of course he knows it runs IRIX...

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  25. Re:CUM IN MY BOTHOLE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the above post is a great one liner!

  26. Anyone Else notice... by Ceadda · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    The logo for their cards looks just like an nvidia logo, tilted sideways a few degrees, with a blue top, and the Cingular wireless guy stamped on the bottom in red? They couldnt even come up with their own logo so they borrowed from everyone else? This says a lot for their business model...

    --
    *There's Klingons on the starboard bow, scrape em off Jim!*
    1. Re:Anyone Else notice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We can see where they are not spending their money.

      You're right, it does say a lot for their business model.

    2. Re:Anyone Else notice... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhh, dude, where's the nVidia logo? Seriously, nVidia really doesn't use a logo anything like that. And, uhh, this time for real, where the hell is this red dude... I really don't see any red... at all.

      Wow...

    3. Re:Anyone Else notice... by yerricde · · Score: 1

      I don't see any NVIDIA influence in XGI's logo, but would you deny that the XGI logo resembles the Cingular logo, except pixelized and painted green?

      --
      Will I retire or break 10K?
  27. Re:Way Offtopic: BSA ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because any techie will see way more software piracy than the man on the street.

    The biggest outlet for "institutional" piracy are small hardware vendors. I kinda doubt the BSA wants to raid a LAN Party, and instead are looking for a ratfink to call out a shop for using pirate Windows holograms or whatever.

  28. A quick summary of the article for Linux users by DeathPenguin · · Score: 4, Informative

    OpenGL performance in Quake 3 and Enemy Territory on these boards roughly matches that of a comparably priced GeForce FX 5600.

    Drivers haven't been tested, but LinuxHardware reports that Linux drivres will be available in Within the first quarter of next year. Let's just hope it doesn't suck suck and that there are some real perks of running an XGi over a GFFX5600.

    1. Re:A quick summary of the article for Linux users by DeathPenguin · · Score: 1

      Er, let's just hope they don't suck as much as my editing/grammar skills.

      Correction: Drivers haven't been tested, but LinuxHardware reports that Linux drivers will be available in within the first quarter of next year. Let's just hope they don't suck and that there are some real perks of running an XGi over a GFFX5600.

  29. Graphs and statistics by Space+cowboy · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Interesting that if you look at the graphs, the blue line doesn't appear to do that well (mid-table stuff) but reading the text, it's currently only running at 450MHz not the specced 500MHz and with beta-level drivers.

    Multiply its figures by (at least) 500/450 and they look a lot better - normally just (really just, indistinguishably so) behind the leaders...

    Cheaper, huh ? About time too :-)

    Simon

    --
    Physicists get Hadrons!
  30. It'll take someone very old to remember this... by HBI · · Score: 1

    I keep on having flashbacks of Ricardo Montablan (of 'Fantasy Island' fame, as well as his role as Khan in Star Trek) singing 'Volare' on a TV commercial in the mid-1970s for the Chrysler/Plymouth car of the same name.

    It was a big honking V8 that they made in woody wagon versions as well. My idiot parents bought one. Yeesh.

    Anyway, the benchmarks on this card suck ass. The card is dead last in most things, and when it isn't, it has quality issues. I am not seeing a first generation winner here. I hope they don't fold up after this iteration of their cards.

    --
    HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
    1. Re:It'll take someone very old to remember this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      having flashbacks of Ricardo Montablan (of 'Fantasy Island' fame, as well as his role as Khan in Star Trek) singing 'Volare'

      Ponce.

    2. Re:It'll take someone very old to remember this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some pix here: http://www.bambootrading.com/paper/chrysler_ads.as p
      UG!

    3. Re:It'll take someone very old to remember this... by bubblegoose · · Score: 1

      Actually there was a Plymouth Volare back in the late 70s. My parents owned one of those. What a major piece of crap.

      I had my first accident in one of those, before I was even old enough to drive. Thought I'd do my parents a favor and back it into the garage for them before a snowstorm. Hit the side of the door with it.

      --
      I hope that someday we will be able to put away our fears and prejudices and just laugh at people. - Jack Handey
    4. Re:It'll take someone very old to remember this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I keep on having flashbacks of Ricardo Montablan (of 'Fantasy Island' fame, as well as his role as Khan in Star Trek) singing 'Volare'

      I'd actually managed to block it out of my memory until now. Thanks a lot, pal. If you end up in purgatory this was probably the reason.

    5. Re:It'll take someone very old to remember this... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      This is not their first iteration. Remember, this is a prototype reference design (there is probably at least one redesign in the board's future) and using alpha-quality drivers. You know, the kind of drivers ATI used to ship with their cards :)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    6. Re:It'll take someone very old to remember this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even better:

      "Cor-r-r- DO-O-O- bah"

      Roll the r's and say it with feeling, just like Ricardo.

      Pickin' and grinnin'
      Mal the Elder

    7. Re:It'll take someone very old to remember this... by upside · · Score: 1

      The name made me think of the Aston Martin Volante. I'm an 80s kid. Oh, and the Gypsy Kings of course.

      --
      I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
    8. Re:It'll take someone very old to remember this... by PreviouslySeen · · Score: 1

      Im old(er)---didn't Montalban do the Chrysler Cordoba (rich Corinthian leather!)commercial and Sergio Franci sing the Volare jingle for the plymouth?
      Im not sure about the Volare details, but Im 99% sure Ricardo didnt sing!

      --
      Meet the new sig, same as the old sig
    9. Re:It'll take someone very old to remember this... by HBI · · Score: 1

      Dude, i'm with you on this one, but he was at least lipsyncing in the commercial I remember!

      I know it was him too - the face was unmistakable.

      --
      HBI's Law: Frequency of calling others Nazis is directly correlated with the likelihood of the accuser being Communist.
  31. eXtreme by Rethcir · · Score: 1

    They should be named EGI, not XGI... I'm automatically boycotting them for using that marketing cliche "eXtreme." If I had a gun with one bullet and could kill anyone I could, it would be the first ad wizard who thought of using that buzzword.

    1. Re:eXtreme by Rosonowski · · Score: 1

      It's actully from the old parent company, Xabre.
      So it should be SGI... but I think someone might be upset if they did that.

      --
      01101001 01100001 01101101 01101110 01101111 01110100 01100001 01101100 01100001 01110111 01111001 01100101 01110010
    2. Re:eXtreme by jonnyfivealive · · Score: 1

      no doubt. speaking as someone who aggressive rollerblades(yeah, look it up) and bikes a little, im sick of everything being Xtreme nowadays. they think they can market anything to anybody as long as it has something to do with an Xtreme sport, etc. its become a cliche joke to anyone in a sport deemed "Xtreme" by marketing folks. notice all the Xtreme sports in commercials nowadays? i dont mind publicity, but they make a mockery of us sometimes.

  32. Why???? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why did XGI even release their VERY beta card and drivers to Toms hardware. The general response to this is that "This card sux!" One to two months away?? These stats dont mean anything. One to two months is a long time in which XGI can work their kinks out and get a very decent card out there for much less than ati or radeon

  33. Re:fooey on Tom's by DataPath · · Score: 1

    What was the athlon64 fiasco? I must've blinked.

    --
    Inconceivable!
  34. Re:Way Offtopic: BSA ads by Stile+65 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I've been getting BSA ads. In fact, I get e-mails from my Monster.com job search agent (heh heh heh, anyone wanna offer a geek a telecommuting job? ;) with banner ads, and as often as not, they advertise the BSA. Makes me that much more excited about all of the signs that are pointing to near-critical-mass adoption of open-source software by corporations and governments.

    --
    I claim first use of "Error No. 0B" - or "No. 0B error." It'll be the new ID 10T!
  35. Good luck to them. by mrsev · · Score: 1

    From the review I think their benchmarks are great. For a first card to be scoring so highly against Nvidia and ATI is pretty amazing.

    This should realy hot things up in the GPU market.... cheaper faster cards!

  36. If you read the article.... by ewhenn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    ... and looked at the results, some were abysmal. Yes, this is still a ref. board, but it seems to run a game great for the price, or horrible for the price. Wolf ET is based on the Quake3 engine, yet Q3 is dramatically higher than Wolf ET (this card came in LAST place in Wolf ET), and this is wiht games based on the same engine. Sorry, I would rather shell out 175$ for a car that will consistantly perform decent across the whole spectrum, than pay 300$ for a card that is sometimes great and sometimes sucks.

    1. Re:If you read the article.... by Wudbaer · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I would rather shell out 175$ for a car that will consistantly perform decent across the whole spectrum, than pay 300$ for a card that is sometimes great and sometimes sucks.

      Hell, for 175$ I would even take a car that only works every second day ! For that price one could take a cab the other days and still save money !

    2. Re:If you read the article.... by cascino · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Check out the Halo: Combat Evolved scores for a good look at the "downside" of this card.
      Where the Radeon 9800 Pro's and XT's score 55-60 frames a second, the Duo V8 comes in at 16 fps. Not so good.
      "With the current driver, the game is practically unplayable..." Ouch.

    3. Re:If you read the article.... by the+morgawr · · Score: 1

      It's because the driver is compleate, utter crap (why they would call something like that "beta" is beyond me). Reading the fine print. It only implements Bi-linear filtering at the moment, i.e. most of the 3d is not using the hardware yet....

      We won't know how good these are until they get some real drivers out.

      --
      The policy of the United States is worse than bad---it is insane. -- Ludwig von Mises, Economic Policy(1959)
    4. Re:If you read the article.... by The+Analog+Kid · · Score: 1

      Wolf ET uses a heavily modified Q3 Engine, if they were both exactly the same both would have comparable numbers, however Wolf ET's Q3 pushes more polyies and other enhancements.

    5. Re:If you read the article.... by JDWTopGuy · · Score: 2, Funny

      Hell, for 175$ I'd take that damn dollar sign and put it where it belongs, in front of the number!

      --
      Ron Paul 2012
  37. Trident? by Cyno · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    If this is Trident X11 support is going to suck for these cards. I have a Trident CyberBlade in my laptop that sucks ass. Avoid these unless you only use Windows.

    1. Re:Trident? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even ATI and Nvidia will not release an opensource driver, with so much copyrighted code they cant. Dont expect any opensource drivers for GFX cards in the future. The future is binary drivers only.

    2. Re:Trident? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have a Cyberblade Aladdin/i1 (northbridge+graphics integrated, shared video memory) Toshiba 1805-series notebook, and XFree86 4.2.0 and above work fine. Xv support works OK, and I can watch DVDs using Mplayer, Ogle or Xine.

      It may not be as fast as the latest and greatest ATI or Nvidia GPU, but works fine in Linux.

      The concept of a 'desknote' (desktop-replacement notebook using socketed desktop CPUs) really came into their own with the Cyberblade chipsets, and I for one am very happy with the trade-offs.

  38. It's called 'brand-recognition' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why innovate when you can ride someone else's brand?
    Lindows anyone? Lycoris?

  39. WARNING - MENTAL ILLNESS ALERT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anger problem

  40. No thanks... by stubear · · Score: 3, Funny

    Let me know when the Type-R model is available though.

    1. Re:No thanks... by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Or...the Veeetech edition...

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    2. Re:No thanks... by sharkey · · Score: 1

      Looking to put it in your bathroom?

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
  41. Exclusive images of the Volari by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.darrennye.com/images/pictures/volare.jp g

    Looks like it really goes. Just look at the radiator on that bad boy!

  42. Tom's Hardware by Sivar · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ah, Tom's Hardware. Not trying to be negative, but IMHO, they are a terrible source for tech information, and the bulk of their reviews contain startling errors, conclusions that defy reason, glaring omissions, and sensationalized reporting.
    The majority of those writing the reviews clearly have no idea what they are talking about, at least regarding the subject they are reporting on. Overall, I would rate them slightly above HotHardware.com.
    Tom himself, as far as I can tell, is on the ball and knows his stuff VERY well, but he doesn't write articles much anymore, and obviously doesn't read them either.
    It is a common practice among hardware enthusiasts to quote Tom's for the humor value, trying to see if the author of the latest article is even more clueless than he was in his (or her) last article.
    To be fair, they do have some excellent articles occasionally, and were the first ones to dare publish information on Intel's unstable Pentium III 1.13GHz processor, but unfortunately these seem to be the exception rather than the rule.

    Also, as has already been stated, XGI is hardly a new company. Of course, these bits of SiS and Trident are in completely new territory if they are trying to compete in the high-end gamer's market. Considering that this is their first real foray into that market, I think they have done an amazing job. I'd say give them the benefit of the doubt until they prove otherwise. Remember, even the (once) most respected companies in the field can faulter, and that XGI has something that is even in the same ballpark as the most seasoned of players is an impressive feat.

    --
    Computer Science is no more about computers than astronomy is about telescopes. --E. W. Dijkstra
  43. I'll say it....... by Veramocor · · Score: 3, Informative

    I'll say it because no one else will. Tom is an ass.

    But more importantly his reviews suck! I haven't even looked at this one but i venture to guess it's at least 15 pages, milk that advertising cash cow, tom!

    If brevity is the soul of wit, then you are one dumb mother fucker Tom.

    Now for the informative part of by rant:

    try www.hardocp.com
    or
    www.anandtech.com
    or
    www.ac eshardware.com

    all 100% better than tom's

    --
    Veramocor
    1. Re:I'll say it....... by Hektor_Troy · · Score: 3, Funny

      So ... you feel that Tom's Hardware is completely useless. Fair enough, everyone is entitled to their opinions.

      You then say that [H]ard|OCP, Anandtech and Ace's Hardware are 100% better than Tom's Hardware. Fair enough, everyone is entitled to their opinions.

      However - 100% of useless is still nothing, so what you're saying is, that [H]ard|OCP, Anandtech and Ace's Hardware are also useless. I don't think that's what you were going for ...

      --
      We do not live in the 21st century. We live in the 20 second century.
    2. Re:I'll say it....... by Veramocor · · Score: 1

      No I believe I said Tom was verbose, not useless.

      But if I had said he was useless, you would be mathematically correct, 100% of 0 is still 0. Though you should probally consider the non literal meaning of 100%, a.k.a. "they are a lot better."

      --
      Veramocor
    3. Re:I'll say it....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HardOCP? The site that banned users who noticed Kyle and his pals had forged benchmark results? Yeah, there's a site you can trust..

    4. Re:I'll say it....... by ameoba · · Score: 1

      Whatever you say may be generally true but Tom is the only one who's gotten his hands on an XGI card.

      --
      my sig's at the bottom of the page.
    5. Re:I'll say it....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tom is an ass. Why? Who knows... maybe the parent poster, but definitely not anyone who reads the post.

      But more importantly his reviews suck! Again, why? Er, probably because they're 15 pages... and we all know 15-page reviews suck.

      List of the other three best-known hardware sites? Aha, instant +4 informative.

      Tom's 15-page reviews consist mostly of graphs with benchmark scores, and a detailed explanation of how those scores were obtained. I personally like that in a review, you obviously don't - fair enough. I would be interested to hear a bit of reasoning behind your opinion, though...

    6. Re:I'll say it....... by merdark · · Score: 1

      I agree that the parent post was pretty bad and uninformative. But there is some truth to the Tom's is crap rant.

      I don't remember the details, but there was an issue a while back where Tom was accepting money for corporations to bias reviews towards them, including posting misleading results. I think that was the point when most of the other hardware sites lost all respect for Tom's Hardware.

      One case of bad reporting I do remember involved the Tom's review of a new Intel chip. It turned out that Tom never even HAD the chip, but instead based the review on an existing chip that was overclocked to the new speed. While this would be fine if the new chip was just a speed bump, it turned out the new chip also had some significant architecture changes (maybe it was the first hyperthreading chip actually). Anyways, after the other sites cried fowel, Tom did put up a small disclaimer on the review in question stateing that it really wasn't the new chip.

      Probably Anandtech is the most reliable sites now a days.

    7. Re:I'll say it....... by Mipsalawishus · · Score: 1

      Not to be anal or anything, but if something is 100% better than something else, then it is 100 + that other quantity, not 100 * the other quantity. I do think that's what he was going far. Your remedial math skills are in dire need of improvement.

    8. Re:I'll say it....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      100% better is 100% (the original worth) plus another 100% (the added worth) which comes to 200%, yes?

      0 x 200% = 0

      What the grandparent post says is that those added 100% are just as zero as the first 100%. I believe his math skills were plenty adequate for this type of idiotic ranting.

    9. Re:I'll say it....... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Just because we are able to decipher someone's meaning, and figure out what they meant to say when it is not what they said, does not excuse them from being precise, and saying what they mean. It might make you a better person to condescend to interpret someone's incorrect use of the language and ignore it, but it doesn't help them. Of course, most people are not willing to learn anyway, unless you are so subtle that it takes you many times longer to explain what they did wrong without hurting their feelings, and that is obviously a waste of time.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    10. Re:I'll say it....... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those are not hardware review sites. You just listed 3 sites that are realy good.. at taking pictures and reprinting press releases.

    11. Re:I'll say it....... by mcpkaaos · · Score: 1

      Okay, who said the old planethardware.com admin could post to Slashdot?

      --
      It goes from God, to Jerry, to me.
    12. Re:I'll say it....... by Ancient+Devices+King · · Score: 1

      Uh, no. Percentages are relative to what you are comparing to. 100 percent better is 2* whatever that is. 2*0=0. Check your damn math before you go insulting other people's.

      --
      -"It seems like you're trying to exploit a security hole. Would you like help?"
    13. Re:I'll say it....... by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      I prefer Home Depot myself.

  44. Games as entertainment brings teenagers. by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 1, Offtopic


    The problem is that the emphasis on games as entertainment, as opposed to games as technology, brings lots of teenagers to Slashdot. It's their chance to hassle adults without paying a price.

    Some of those teenagers get moderation points and they moderate comments they don't understand, and flood Slashdot with garbage.

    1. Re:Games as entertainment brings teenagers. by redgopher · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I'd like to think of myself as an intelligent teenager. After all, one more year to go until you can't even call me that anymore.

      Besides, back when you were a teenager, you were the smartest and you were a geek, right?

      Well its just another generation coming into the ranks.

      --
      Insert clever one liner here.
    2. Re:Games as entertainment brings teenagers. by RichardX · · Score: 0, Flamebait


      I'd like to think of myself as an intelligent teenager. After all, one more year to go until you can't even call me that anymore.


      When you turn fourteen you're getting a lobotomy?

      --
      Curiosity was framed. Ignorance killed the cat.
    3. Re:Games as entertainment brings teenagers. by corbettw · · Score: 1

      "I'd like to think of myself as an intelligent teenager."

      So would all the other teenagers out there. Trust me, when you reach 30, you'll look back and think "God, I was an idiot!"

      It's OK, though, from what I hear when you reach 50 you look back at your 30s and say "God, I was an idiot!"

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    4. Re:Games as entertainment brings teenagers. by redgopher · · Score: 1

      Well I suppose in eleven years I'll find out.
      And you're probably right about that age thing.. but I also recall some say 'Ah, to be young again'

      --
      Insert clever one liner here.
  45. /.er's waiting to read about stuff that matters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it seems like we've been waiting a long time?

  46. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Matrox used to be a leader in the graphics market. I lived in Dorval and I now some people who used to work there. The story is they started to get all uppity about potential new employees' grade point averages. They would only hire people with a GPA above 3.8.


    The thing is, to get these marks you either cheat, or are an idiot savant, or effectively a genius. Now you put all these people in the same room, what do you get? Superior products? No.


    You get ego clashes, clueless idiots, hangers-on and cheaters who couldn't design a 10ms monostable with a 555 and a book from Radio Shack. NO real-world experience, NO real skills whatsoever.
    The Matrox you see today is due to universities run wild and employers being blinded by them.


    Just another example of the irrelevance of university to real-world problems.

  47. Entice them to support Linux by kenneth_martens · · Score: 4, Interesting

    XGI is a new player in this market and need something to distinguish themselves from the competition. This is an opportunity to persuade them that supporting Linux by releasing drivers would gain them positive reviews and have an impact on sales. Linux is gaining in popularity in the enterprise and server areas, so announcing Linux support for their products would sort of *legitimize* XGI's cards. It's worth a shot--the question is, how do we convince them?

    1. Re:Entice them to support Linux by Wooky_linuxer · · Score: 1

      Their windows drivers still sucks, I doubt they'll divert their precious time to release Linux drivers. Do you bid they will opensource their drivers? I don't think so. It would provide their competitors too many insights at the inner workings of their boards, washing out any advantages they might pull out. We will be stuck with Nvidia for some time. Anyways, Nvidia OpenGL performance is much better than ATI's at the moment.

      --
      Where is that guy who'd die defending what I had to say when I need him?
    2. Re:Entice them to support Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it only legitimizes the card in your view and other linux users views. they are just starting up so the last thing they need to do is waste valuable resources on creating linux drivers when the vast majority of their sales will be to windows users.

    3. Re:Entice them to support Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps they know that, and by opening up the drivers maybe they can devote more time to improving the hardware.

    4. Re:Entice them to support Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      exactly , thats why offsetting some of the driver work to the open source community would give them more time to make better hardware.

    5. Re:Entice them to support Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Enterprise? And who plays games there? At the enterprise level, one gets Matrox. Superior 2D, crisp clear screen, but useless for hard core gaming. How is XGI for word processing or similar, how does the XGI board compare to Matrox G550 for office use? For gaming, Linux is so far not exactly the gamers platform. Still it would be nice if all major players treated Linux as well as Windows as far as support. ButMatrox is the board for non-gaming Linux, multi-monitor works well, 2D is as good as it gets without buying specialized CAD or graphics boards.

    6. Re:Entice them to support Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think if they manage to create X drivers that are reliable and use significantly more of their cards' capabilities than the drivers ATI and NVidia have provided, they will see significant sales from Linux users. If they also make the drivers open enough that they can be used in the various free BSDs, then they will see some sales from these folks as well. There will be a slight added cost of programming properly and supporting the release (versus a closed, badly done X11 driver), but it could mean significant added sales. We've been looking for quality 3D video boards that can be used by these OSs for some time. Availability of such boards would also encourage greater use of Linux and free BSD for 3D applications.

      Word gets around quickly in the Linux and OSS world. If XGI want to make a dent in the market they'll have to think differently than their competitors. Creating proper and open X11 drivers is one way to do that.

    7. Re:Entice them to support Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes because lord knows, knowing the register layout and how the CRTC is connected to the RAMDAC is all you need in order to create a perfect, gate-for-gate hardware clone of any hardware at a fraction of the cost!

      Oh wait, no it isn't. There is no reason not to release specs for a peice of hardware. Guess those companies not releasing specs just suck then!

    8. Re:Entice them to support Linux by Wooky_linuxer · · Score: 1

      You need far more than that to write a decent driver.

      --
      Where is that guy who'd die defending what I had to say when I need him?
    9. Re:Entice them to support Linux by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1
      Well not by telling them that linux is really big in servers. Not exactly the place you put a near high end gaming video card (or do you really need two gpu's to render a remote ssh session?).

      Anyway there seem to be linux drivers under development (later this year).

      And yes it could be a nice adition, after all writing the drivers themselves shouldn't be to hard for people who can design chips. Matrox has been slipping as the default linux vid card maker. I could seriously use a powerfull dual output card for my linux machine.

      --

      MMO Quests are like orgasms:

      You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    10. Re:Entice them to support Linux by davew2040 · · Score: 1

      Um... "we"?

      You are aware that plenty of extremely low-end video cards have Linux drivers, right?

    11. Re:Entice them to support Linux by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      There are drivers from nVidia for Linux. The problem is that they are binary only. We need open source driver support.

      To the naysayers under this comment; It's not just about games, though that is an important part of the puzzle. People want one operating system to do everything, they don't want to be booting into windows to play games. Games are an important part of the Desktop puzzle. However, you also need 3D for, say, 3D graphics, so it's not just about gaming.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    12. Re:Entice them to support Linux by Ancient+Devices+King · · Score: 1
      or do you really need two gpu's to render a remote ssh session?


      You'll need it in that future version of X where you'll be able to have true transparent window overlays!
      --
      -"It seems like you're trying to exploit a security hole. Would you like help?"
    13. Re:Entice them to support Linux by aminorex · · Score: 1

      Hollywood render farms are mostly Linux and
      can sell a lot of 3-d hardware. It will go
      to the best price/performance ratio for a
      given app, every time.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    14. Re:Entice them to support Linux by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1

      I was always under the impression that render farms used the cpu. Same as say 3dmax does under windows (at least that was true a few years ago). I did hear some suggestions that with gpu's becoming cheaper that it might be used in renderfarms but this was dismissed I think since for now the image generated by them can't compete with the routines done in software on the main cpu. Also gpu's seem to be more expensive as you still need a cpu to control them.

      --

      MMO Quests are like orgasms:

      You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

  48. Re:LIEf as a phonIE corepirate nazi FUDgeLicker? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What the devil!?!?

  49. quit your fussing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    va lairIE/robbIE & their ?pr? ?firm? scriptdead hypenosys team will decide what matters. if you don't like it, then go sit in the timeout corner, &/or rat out your frIEnds to the corepirate nazi bouNTy hunters.

    maybe, buy the time you're done, maybe robbIE will have decided what stuff that matters storIE to tell next.

  50. won trick ponIEs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    not everybody can/wants to, see the light, yet.

  51. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by rabtech · · Score: 1

    Au contraire! You forget that those were the days of the API wars, before DirectX on windows and before cards could really do a full OpenGL implementation (hurrah for game engine specific ICDs, heh)

    These days, everyone writes to DirectX, period. Whether they use Direct3D or OpenGL is irrelevant, they all use DirectInput, Directsound, so on and so forth.

    This of course means that a graphics card maker need only supply DirectX and OpenGL support and users can run their games on the card. Granted - card specific paths are often optimized for speed, but the games will run.

    --
    Natural != (nontoxic || beneficial)
  52. Review summary by Animats · · Score: 1

    The textures are washed out and lack detail. Some rendering is wrong. The "dual chip" version is always displaying a frame behind. But it has a really l33t FPS rate on Quake.

  53. Fucking retard by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OMG OMG LOONIX!!!!11 *wank wank wank*

    Take a shower you dirty fucking hippie. I hope you choke on some Linus cock. Having fun typing out your impotent rage on the internet? Go ahead, stomp your feet. Wave your little chubby fists around... Maybe cry a little so mommy can bring you some more LinuxWorld magazines.

  54. Here, I'll save you sum time by drix · · Score: 2, Funny

    The good news: a new, cheaper GFX company bursts on to the scene to challenge Ati and Nvidia dominance.

    The bad news: the cards suck ass.

    So basically, nothing has changed since you woke up this morning.

    --

    I think there is a world market for maybe five personal web logs.
    1. Re:Here, I'll save you sum time by cybrthng · · Score: 1

      How do they suck ass?

      A first gen card that beats out many of the competing boards and offers a competitive price?

      Looks damn good for coming out of the blue. I think some driver tweaking will catch it up and ofcourse optimizations of the board/gpu by next year should give it a good leap.

      it will be interesting!

    2. Re:Here, I'll save you sum time by drinkypoo · · Score: 1
      It beats out none of the competing boards. It's competing against their high end, and it doesn't beat the current champs in any of the tests, and loses badly to even now-outdated cards in some tests.

      With that out of the way, these are beta boards using beta drivers, and both the hardware (not the chips, but the board designs) and the software will evolve before these devices come to market.

      By the time it comes to market, however, both ATI and nVidia can be expected to have improved their performance, so they will never actually beat either of them. However, they may come to offer a better price:performance ratio.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    3. Re:Here, I'll save you sum time by Bilange · · Score: 1

      The good news: a new, cheaper GFX company bursts on to the scene to challenge Ati and Nvidia dominance. Is this a good thing? I dont think so. My point: it would be a real pain for game devloppers to release a bug-free game if there was like 69 companies each having their own chipset (or whatever you call it). Having Direct3D based versus OpenGL based cards is wrong (from a gamer point of view: "which card should i pick?"). All that diversity makes me think that videogames consoles might have an advantage after all: one set of hardware used, so no need to spend time on porting the game on another "hardware set".

      --
      "...a generation of kids has grown up thinking Trance is the shittiest music since country and western." - Paul van Dyk
  55. why not parallelization ? by master_p · · Score: 2, Interesting

    A new graphics company enters the game...yawn. They sure have no aces up their sleeves. They could though, if they had used a parallelizable engine (tile rendering, for some), and they could just add more processors as new models are requested by the market. They could also make cards upgradable.

    1. Re:why not parallelization ? by SharpFang · · Score: 1

      They sure have no aces up their sleeves.

      While in hardware they have none, they have a strong one outside that. Price.

      (personally I'd like to buy a new, decent gfx card. But all new decend gfx cards cost a fortune I'm just not ready to spend. So...

      --
      45 5F E1 04 22 CA 29 C4 93 3F 95 05 2B 79 2A B2
    2. Re:why not parallelization ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      9600XT is under $200 (granted, "just" under at most places). It kicks some major booty, and has DX9 support, so it'll last you a good long while (read 2-3 years).

    3. Re:why not parallelization ? by ameoba · · Score: 1

      What do you mean by 'decent'? What do you consider an acceptable price range?

      Radeon 9200s are currently in the $50 price range and have 'decent' performance for most things on the market (you may have to cut back resolution and IQ for some cutting edge games). For 3-4x the price ($150-200 range for all but ATI's top cards)) you can get some extra performance (less than 2x) and pick up DX9 and better IQ.

      --
      my sig's at the bottom of the page.
    4. Re:why not parallelization ? by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      I guess because tile based rendering never seems to work on a PC. I'm not sure if there is some technical reason it tends not to work well or if the companies trying it have just sucked, but every tile based card I've ever seen has worked poorly. They have poor performance, graphical glitches, or more frequently both.

    5. Re:why not parallelization ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Better IQ for $150. I guess I need it, because I don't get it.

    6. Re:why not parallelization ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IQ = Image Quality

      Things like various degrees/methods of anti-aliasing.

    7. Re:why not parallelization ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Google Directory returns a bunch of tests relating to "intelligence quotient", and nothing about "image quality". If you're too lazy to type, don't comment--making up abbreviations nobody has ever seen before simply doesn't work.

  56. Re:I don't really see your point. by botzi · · Score: 1

    I have a Toshiba Satellite 1800-100 with Ali all in Wonder chipsep=> Trident accelerator runnning Slaskware. Never had any problems setting up X, or at least problems coming from the Trident card. The only major issue was with wrong screen refresh rates detected by default, which doesn't allow to use the optimal resolution, but it can be rapidly fixed.
    Anyway, my point was: Sure, Trident cards should not even have the right to be called Graphic Accelerators, but hell I don't see what your problem with X11 is???? It's up and running and it feels pretty smooth.

    --
    1. No sig. 2. ???? 3. Profit!!!
  57. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

    You should get an account so I can befriend you.

    --
    I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  58. Toms hardware is running BSA ads by scrytch · · Score: 4, Informative

    I will never visit or recommend tomshardware again as long as they run ads for the Business Software Alliance.

    --
    I've finally had it: until slashdot gets article moderation, I am not coming back.
    1. Re:Toms hardware is running BSA ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would never know, because I'm a leech... and don't get ads : P heha

    2. Re:Toms hardware is running BSA ads by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BSA is great for free software.

  59. Taiwan of course? by Moridineas · · Score: 1, Insightful

    No denying that Taiwan is HUGE, but why is this an of course?

    Let's look at the other main graphics card companies--Nvidia, ATI, Matrox.

    Nvidia--California based.

    ATI--Canada based.

    Matrox--Canada based.

    Now, if we were talking motherboard manufacturers, things might be different...

    1. Re:Taiwan of course? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The founders and CEO's of both ATI and NVidia are taiwanese immigrants.

      I don't know about Matrox.

      -Johan

    2. Re:Taiwan of course? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shh, the whole foolish pride of made in america or canada for the dimwits will be thwarted if they know!

  60. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    On the other hand, if you have many hardware manufacturers, then the need is created for open standards.

  61. More is better by grapeape · · Score: 1

    Everyone seems to forget the mid 90's when this upstart video company developed a chip called the NV1 it was sold as the Edge3d card here in the states. In comparison with the voodoo it was total crap but the company kept plugging away and now Nvidia is a household name. This new video company could help aleviate the stranglehold that Nvidia and Ati have on the market and could mean more reasonable prices for all. I dont know about you but I still feel weird paying more for my video card than my processor and motherboard.

  62. simple : Email Them (details below) by polyp2000 · · Score: 1

    An excellent point,

    why not email them ?

    developer@xgitech.com

    other contact details here.
    XGI Contact Details

    I just popped an email off! Anyone else care to join the vigil?

    nick ..

    --
    Electronic Music Made Using Linux http://soundcloud.com/polyp
  63. It's on the beta to-do list by EdMack · · Score: 1

    This could end up a neato little model

    --
    puts ("Python r0cks\n");
  64. eXtreme? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I personally refuse to use products with names that involve anything like "Xtreme" or "resQ"

  65. Time for a low cost alternative by Bruha · · Score: 1

    AMD has helped prices in the processor market for years but there has not really been a player willing to wage a price war in the graphics card market. Now maybe those 500 dollars cards will come down a bit.

  66. This was explained by EdMack · · Score: 1

    The texturing problems were due to not all the filtering modes being implemented, and the other glitches were reported and are being worked on

    --
    puts ("Python r0cks\n");
    1. Re:This was explained by Animats · · Score: 1

      When a reviewer says it's going to be fixed next month, they're sucking up.

  67. Whole lotta trollin' goin' on by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Hugely entertaining posts. Enormous mod-point wasting antics ahoy! To all you trolls out there: keep modding up one another's dodgy pic links, so we can laugh as losers visit them!

  68. Simple Sales Guide by ljavelin · · Score: 1

    It's simple: make sure that the card is well-supported with decent drivers, and you have a sale!

    Ignore suport for Linux... and you're not even on the radar for me.

    1. Re:Simple Sales Guide by merdark · · Score: 1

      You should rename your guide:

      "How to capture 0.001% of the market"

      These companies are there to make money. The Linux desktop market is not that big and the 3D gaming card market is even smaller. Linux support is probably close to last in priority for a company in this area at this stage.

  69. V10 and V12 are already available by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm already running a V10 in my machine and have to say it's pretty fast. Dualhead dualchannel configurations are also available from SGI. I wonder what they are going to say about a company called XGI using the same name for their line of graphics cards :).

  70. Sure this is cool and blabla.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But does it have working glcopytexsubimage?

  71. Questionable if they match a 5600 by bogie · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The quake3 page shows something interesting, but look at the scores on the ET page. It comes in dead last by a long shot. Looks roughly to be in GF3 range. That's kinda typical for most minority GPU vendors I've seen over the years. They can usually come close to matching entry level cards and a benchmark or two but fall down miserably on the vast majority of benchmarks. Think Kyro etc.

    Also these "3rd party" GPU vendors tend to not have the resources to implement truly state of the art functions. So while their may be some PR on advanced Pixel Shader support I'd be surprised if they can ever pull it off. I know I mentioned Kyro already, but I can just see the same thing happening. Poor performance was blamed on drivers, but then in the end we learned that the card just wasn't that good and no amount of driver tweaking could make up for its architectural flaws.

    I do welcome another player, but I'm sure not holding my breath that they will be able to compete on a technical level with the big boys. In most cases consumers will still be better off buying the previous generation of GPU's from established vendors who have all their kinks worked out and have proven that they will be around long term.

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    1. Re:Questionable if they match a 5600 by ameoba · · Score: 1

      Of course, they are shooting pretty high for their first release. Look at where they claim they'll be positioning their products in the market. They claim their high-end cards will be able to perform on the same level as ATI's (current) highest level card, the Radeon 9800.

      I really have to wonder if they'll be able to properly pull this off. Look at nVidia and ATI's entries into the high-end graphics market; it took them a few product cycles to achieve equality and then a few more to get dominance.

      Of course, if they can even reach parity with the middle high-end chips (which may be low high-end chips by the time XGI finally ships) and price things at or below the competion, we could have something interesting on our hands.

      --
      my sig's at the bottom of the page.
    2. Re:Questionable if they match a 5600 by platypus · · Score: 1

      Of course, if they can even reach parity with the middle high-end chips (which may be low high-end chips by the time XGI finally ships) and price things at or below the competion, we could have something interesting on our hands.

      This and open sourced drivers which are managed good enough to gather the talent out there.
      50% of all linux users shifting their buying decisions to XGI cards for their next buy just because of this drivers could help them a lot at the beginning. Maybe they are lucky, and are at the right time for some big linux based home pc edition.

      At least, if there are no contractual or other obstacles, an opensourced _graphics_ driver is an asset.

    3. Re:Questionable if they match a 5600 by DeadScreenSky · · Score: 1

      But the Kyro was pretty nicely designed hardware. The Sega Dreamcast used a lesser version of the card, and you only need to look at arcade games like the beautiful Virtua Fighter 4 (not the ugly PS2 port) to see what a more evolved form of Kyro is capable of. Both versions of the Naomi arcade hardware (and their Dreamcast sibling) have driven some of the best looking games of the last five years. So I find it hard to believe the hardware was really that bad - especially keeping in mind that arcade developers simply don't have the opportunity to optimize their games around (non-custom) hardware as much as console and PC devs do.

      --
      There is no excellent beauty that hath not some strangeness in the proportion. -- Francis Bacon
  72. Big deal by ArchieBunker · · Score: 1

    Slashdot (the biggest anti MS site) runs banners for MSDN subscriptions. Whats your point?

    --
    Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
    1. Re:Big deal by scrytch · · Score: 2, Informative

      > Slashdot (the biggest anti MS site) runs banners for MSDN subscriptions. Whats your point?

      Feeding the trolls: Microsoft sells a product. It may be a crappy product that OEM's are strongarmed into reselling, but they're still a business. The BSA exists to shake companies down with license audits, and has jackbooted thugs literally break down doors to ensure compliance.

      Slashdot is "anti-microsoft" insofar as there's a large and very vocal segment of its population consisting of semi-literate fanboys who have knee-jerk reactions to everything involving microsoft.

      --
      I've finally had it: until slashdot gets article moderation, I am not coming back.
  73. Everything BUT gaming.... by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

    While one can play games on a Matrox, they were NEVER the best for any 3D games, so I wouldn't use gaming performance as a reason that they are going "down the tubes". While games are a significant part of the graphic card segment, they are hardly the only part, and because the company really doesn't compete in games doesn't mean they don't have a strong market niche.

    For everything else that isn't 3D gaming, I've found Matrox cards to do plenty well and they did everything I wanted, plus a few things their competitors didn't do at all.

    They do have some specialized cards too, such as four-head and a card with outputs designed for 12 megapixel displays. They also have some heavy duty cards designed for professional real time multi-stream video editing.

    1. Re:Everything BUT gaming.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When the Parhelia came out, it was marketed by Matrox as a gaming card. The driver issues have basically killed that idea.

      If you don't have an application that needs high-resolution color, the Parhelia is a phenomonal waste of money for a 2D card.

  74. Actually, no. by Qbertino · · Score: 0

    Matrox?
    Weren't those the guys that would release overpriced cards that were buggy and did a perfect job at ignoring or shoddily supporting every industry standard they could think of?
    To me, Matrox is the Microsoft of Video cards. All just legends built entirely on legend promoted by people with near to zilch knowlege of computergrafics.

    A friend of is also a big matrox fan. The kind of matrox millenium 'jerk' that does wee-wee in his pants when it comes to talking about a card that was real big back in 1995, when PCs had just finally talking over the Amiga market.
    I own a Matrox Mystique. It ruled for about 2 weeks, and the extra edition of Mechwarrior customized for it was really cool too. But to call a card good because they do 'good 2D' (just listen to yourself saying that) is plain silly. Shure the millenium had the most memory back then (a stunning 2 MB!) and shure it works for console and konqureror. But since back then Matrox has has lost its grip and released nothing but hideosly overprived buggy crap for people who don't need performance. That's my impression anyway.

    --
    We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
    1. Re:Actually, no. by jregel · · Score: 2

      I use Matrox cards and will continue to do so for any new boxes. The 2D quality of Matrox cards is *still* better than Nvidia and ATI. I will happily concede that for 3D, Matrox do not make competitive cards, but I don't run any 3D applications on my PC. For 3D, I've got a PS2.

      It's all to do with finding the right tool for the job. I've yet to see a decent web browser / email client / nntp client / terminal that requires fast 3D graphics. YMMV.

    2. Re:Actually, no. by 13Echo · · Score: 2, Funny

      What? I've never had a buggy Matrox product, but I've also never owned one of their Parhelia products. Millennium, Mistique, G200/G400... All were excellent products.

    3. Re:Actually, no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound just like the zealot in the guy's story. The 2D quality of a modern ATI-built card compares is indistinguishable from Matrox. The only thing good about G-series cards is that they can be bought quite cheaply on eBay.

    4. Re:Actually, no. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you want to see where the ati cards really suck ass - try using their tv out and compare the quality. Its absolute crap next to the matrox ones (since ati's cards can't do true NTSC/PAL resolutions for output). Thats one reason why Matrox owns the video editing market, high quality output and ability to run 2-4 monitors off one card

    5. Re:Actually, no. by Reziac · · Score: 1

      The only bug I know of is that the G400 reportedly does not support VESA 2.0 *in hardware*, but rather relies on the driver for that, and only has hardware support for VESA 1.2. I use a DOS game engine that knows the difference, which is the only reason it concerns me. Also, I've found some older linux disties won't work if the video card doesn't have VESA 2.0 *in hardware*.

      Otherwise -- I've been buying Matrox Millennium G200 cards off Ebay and off the used table at swapmeets, and have stopped worrying about which submodel I'm getting, being there are several (or even whether there's a seller warranty) -- they all work fine, no problems whatever with any of them, in any environment. They aren't terribly fussy about having the "exactly correct" driver, either -- any G200 driver seems to work well enough for any G200 card.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  75. The Latin is a little off by jazuki · · Score: 3, Informative

    THG is a little off on the Latin:

    1. Volatus means flight, not velocity

    2. Volari appears to be closer to volare, meaning "to fly"

    3. Velocity comes from the Latin velocitas (meaning quickness), which is derived from velox (meaning quick)

    While the fact that the two stems (velo- and vol- for velox and volare) share initial consonants suggests that there is a relationship between these stems, this relationship is more likely to have arisen in some proto- or pre-Latin than Latin itself.

    1. Re:The Latin is a little off by Potor · · Score: 1

      you're right; there is no etymological relation, but Martial seems to use volatus (volatu)as appositive to praecipens (praecipiti), ie. rushing head-long. See Epirgram 11, verse 91, line 9.

  76. Bad news for the game industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    I am a PC game developer. We recently released a W32 game which uses OpenGL.

    Some hardware companies were especially responsive when we found driver bugs and in general were very helpful and an absolute pleasure to work with. nVidia's developer relations team is head and shoulders above the rest.

    Just about all others were very good. I don't think it would be fair to expect anything more than what all the rest gave. I'd put Matrox, Intel, ATI, 3Dlabs, and S3 in this category.

    Then there was SiS and Trident. We experienced tremendous bugs with the Xabre. Numerous times I offered small code examples to reproduce these bugs. These are very big bugs; crashes if you use a 3d texture, crashes if you use certain keywords in a vertex program, incorrect rendering of primitives, etc. It was around a year before we shipped I started to contact IHVs to ensure any bugs they had could be worked out. SiS and Trident didn't give a damn.

    It is one thing to develop good hardware. That is 1/3 of the task. Companies have been doing that for years. Remember the g400? Great hardware, aweful drivers. The next 1/3 is making everything run correctly. ATI, which is pretty good these days, is still fixing bugs like flipped textures in Flight Sim 2004 (which would obviously affect other games, FS04 is just the first to expose it) in their latest drivers. How mature can we expect the drivers to be from a new company? Not too good, given no new company has done it first try and these do have a track record of being aweful.

    The final 1/3 of the driver is to extract maximum performance. I'm not too worried about this unless it comes before the other more important parts as generally this is some form of cheating; or as Trident called it "application specific acceleration"

    I truely pitty somebody who buys one of these cards because it gets the same 3dmark score as a GeForce or Radeon, but costs $10 less. There is more to a good card than the scores it gets in the most popular benchmarked games, it is more important that it runs all the games you want. The Xabre can't run FS2004, Splinter Cell, Homeworld2, etc. Atleast Intel's integrated graphics which may not be that quick do run everything reasonably well.

    Please remember this when you recommend a system for a friend. Please insist they either spend the extra money for an nVidia or ATI product or simply get a card in their price range with less raw 3dmark performance from nVidia or ATI.

    You get what you pay for when it comes to software support!

    1. Re:Bad news for the game industry by staaktdenarbeid · · Score: 1

      I couldn't agree more with this. Technical marketing of products focuses on expressing the basic characteristics with only one or two numbers, and then expects the customer to base their choice on those numbers and balance those against product price. Unfortunately, those numbers rarely express the real points you mentioned above. Programmable systems are really only half a product, and the software/firmware you run on top of it is essential to make it complete.

    2. Re:Bad news for the game industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Informative ??? Duh, can't check anything, and looks more like an NVIDIA advert than anything else.
      Could you just give something to back up your rant ?

    3. Re:Bad news for the game industry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I said please insist your friends buy nVidia or ATI. I don't mean to bash the other IHVs. Matrox and 3Dlabs are actually doing very well on the driver front and there is no reason to not recommend their hardware, other than nVidia and ATI will give you more game performance for your money. I have no problem with people buying Matrox, 3Dlabs, or Intel products because they consistantly perform pretty well. It is just that ATI and nVidia do the same for cheaper.

      Intel is actually doing fantastic! Frankly their integrated graphics is at a DX7 level has poor performance, but generally you can just turn off antialiasing and run at a low resolution to get an acceptable frame rate and most importantly-STILL BE ABLE TO RUN ALL 3D APPLICATIONS. Their drivers are great from my experience; even better than ATI's or 3Dlabs or Matrox's! The only company with better drivers is nvidia. If somebody is buying a new PC and isn't going to be doing a lot of 3d applications then going with Intel is probably the most intelligent choice if they want a P4 system. If they are willing to buy an Athlon they can get an nForce2 system, which IMHO is even better.

      S3 and PowerVR are unknowns, but I unfortunately I can't really recommend them until their next products come out.

      The way I see things is the below average gamer deserves to play games just as much at the over clocking tweaking guru and (s)he should still be able to play every game; even if it runs at 50% of the frame rate it could be running at because they simply haven't upgraded their drivers. It's great people can upgrade their computers to make them better, but why shouldn't an extremely casual gamer be able to simply play every game on the market without even having to know what a driver is? It is unfortunately these types of people that don't know what a driver is that unfortunately buy systems with XGI cards with crappy drivers and wonder why they can't even run games. Then either learn everything they need to and upgrade their drivers/hardware or if they (I'm going to make huge stereo types here, please don't hate me) are older than a teenager or a woman become extremely frustrated with computers and hate computers. Even with respectable companies like ATI if one bought a new system and Flight Sim 2004 they would find the odd texture flipped unless they knew to upgrade to the 3.9 Catalyst drivers... How many grandparents really want to learn all this? They just want to turn it on and have some fun-it shouldn't be more complex for them than a toaster unless they choose to seak ways to tweak their system and get better performance.

      I'm sorry, but it is just so frustrating that the cards like XGI's that cause the most problems always end up in the hands of people least suited to deal with them. :(

      So I'm begging the /. community which will be respected for their general computer knowlege to insist that your friends/neighbours/family buy from companies that write good drivers (doesn't just apply to video cards). Actually with windows XP just about every system crash is going to be due to a bad driver.

      If you let them buy a crappy system for a bit cheaper you'll be the one to pay for it in the long run by doing all kinds of technical support. So stick with nVidia/ATI/Intel (or 3Dlabs and Matrox if they really need those cards for some reason) for now until the other companies prove themselves!

    4. Re:Bad news for the game industry by Snowpony · · Score: 1
      Anonymous Coward at 11:53 AM said:
      Then either learn everything they need to and upgrade their drivers/hardware or if they (I'm going to make huge stereo types here, please don't hate me) are older than a teenager or a woman become extremely frustrated with computers and hate computers.
      I do not think we need to add the gender bias here anymore; there are quite enough technically capable ladies out there like myself to know how to do a hardware/driver upgrade.
      --
      Snowy Angelique Maslov - http://www.snowy.org/
  77. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like somebody doesn't have a University degree.

  78. Re:Hi Mef by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It says nothing about the parent. Are you thick?

  79. OT: Halo performance from the article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    The 2nd highest card in this category is a FX 5950 ultra scoring 58.6 fps.

    This is nvidia's top of the line card coupled with a p4 3.2 and it's just able to eek out the desirable 60 fps (What's with that game anyways, 60 is the goal for tv but in the 70's is more desirable on a pc.)

    What I'm getting at is, is there something wrong with this picture that such a top of the line system is just making the performance equivlant of what an xbox is accomplishing with a launch title?

    Yes, console makers can optimize their hardware more specifically geared towrards gaming and game developers can optimze and get more out of the hardware, but this is a launch title and would have learned more tricks with current titles.

    1. Re:OT: Halo performance from the article by Junta · · Score: 1

      Easy. Nothe that for one, the resolution is 1280x1024. Now I'm not sure what would be the XBOX render output, but I would wager that at *most* it is 800x600, and likely to be 640x480. If 640x480, the render area is over 4x as detailed as the XBOX output. Color depth also could be different.

      Secondly, the goal for the TV output is probably ~30 fps, beyond that and you are throwing out frames (well, 29.97 to be more precise on NTSC). Note by this goal, 1600x1200 (4 times the area of even 800x600), is attainable, give or take a couple of FPS.

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    2. Re:OT: Halo performance from the article by Babbster · · Score: 1
      Actually, the Xbox can output HDTV-compatible resolutions of 720p and 1080i (1280x720 progressive and 1920x1080 interlaced, respectively). There is indeed a bottleneck in terms of video memory that adds limits in terms of polygon count, texture detail, etc., but the resolutions are available - just like the PC, the usable resolution is dependent on what the game/program is trying to do.

      Also, while admittedly NTSC is only capable of 30 full frames/second, since it's an interlaced format a game console can render 60 frames/second internally and provide that greater sense of motion and fluidity on an NTSC television (generating lines 1,3,5,... of frame 1 in the first field; 2,4,6,... of frame 2 in the second field; etc.) - while the actual picture displayed will have a lower true resolution (by not displaying every frame in full over both fields), in video games it still provides a "60 fps experience," particularly nice for the more twitchy games out there.

    3. Re:OT: Halo performance from the article by Junta · · Score: 1

      Interesting on the HDTV resolutions, though I wonder how it is handled, I would think just bumping up the resolution would mess with games developed for and tested on NTSC level resolution, things would slow down for games that really push it.....

      Now, as to the strategy proposed for getting 60 fps, I doubt that the XBox would expose this sort of feature, simply because it would be a rather more significant design chnage for TV-out over the desktop models, and I understand they wanted to keep R&D for the venture down. However, presuming that they *do* expose a method to rendering to the even and odd scanlines of a 'single' NTSC full frame separately, that leaves only 240 lines of resolution to work with (now we are talking Wolf3D/Doom resolutions). The resulting jaggedness of any given frame of the screen would more than offset motion smoothness, and putting that aside, you have again greatly reduced the complexity of the render task, so 60 fps should be a breeze.

      Of course, even after taking all this into account, the simple fact of the matter is that a PC version of a game is likely to pull out more bells and whistles to take advantage of the more sophisticated hardware, so even if the X-Box and PC were playing on equal ground graphics complexity-wise, the PC version would be more demanding because the developers' know the platform is more accomodating.

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    4. Re:OT: Halo performance from the article by Babbster · · Score: 1
      Interesting on the HDTV resolutions, though I wonder how it is handled, I would think just bumping up the resolution would mess with games developed for and tested on NTSC level resolution, things would slow down for games that really push it.....

      They don't just bump up the resolution on a whim. The games are tested at whatever resolutions the developers want to support, and if they can't get the proper performance at HD resolutions, they leave it at the standard 480. This is why most Xbox games don't have the higher resolutiosn (and why the Soulcalibur 2 720p mode is displayed in a 4:3 window inside of the standard 16:9 resolution).

  80. Tom's Hardware and Dupes by can56 · · Score: 1

    To aid the memory-impaired readers of slashdot, dupe articles should be clearly labelled. I think this icon would be appropriate:

  81. Don't worry: they're shit even under windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Driver support for trident shit is poor even under windows. I have a toshiba satellite and while 3d support in linux is non existent, the support under windows is buggy and there are no updates, either from toshiba or trident. And I had to find a hacked version of the driver to have support for opengl (trident/toshiba official driver only support directx and even that pretty badly)

  82. What?!? No +1 Funny mods? by More+Karma+Than+God · · Score: 1

    The parent post is great!

    It's a perfect satire of the extremely rabid open source nuts. (No offence is intended against the non-rabid open source nuts..)

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    1. Re:What?!? No +1 Funny mods? by norsk_hedensk · · Score: 1

      We need "rabid open source nuts" to push the envelope and encourage more companies into providing linux support.

    2. Re:What?!? No +1 Funny mods? by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      The phrase "rabit open source nuts" is made only more hilarious by the fact that many "open source nuts" are seemingly afraid of water. Considering that many large companies have fountains in their lobbies, I wonder how much good they would be at pushing companies into providing Linux support...

      --
      It's been a long time.
  83. Re:fooey on Tom's by Quickening · · Score: 1

    Tom's wasn't the only site to do this, but they compared the actually released Athlon64 to a hastily repackaged Xeon (the "P4EE") which wouldn't ship for another 2 months, and declared Intel the winner! AND, all the benchmarks were in 32 bit!

    --
    tcboo
  84. if they support open source Linux drivers... by penguin7of9 · · Score: 1

    If they support open source Linux drivers and they work even moderately well, I'll replace all my cards and buy a dozen (I'm not kidding). I'm really tired of the hassles resulting from nVidia and ATI's binary-only drivers.

  85. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's right, I don't. But I have a job with a paycheck and no debt instead. Who's the idiot now? I have real world skills and a great resume. Employers like me because I actually can use my skills to build something, not just repeat stuff I heard in school like a parrot without understanding.
    What's so great about university anyways? Books only work when you overpay for them?
    It's funny how the same people who used to beat me up in high school because I was a book nerd are now the same people going around talking about 'education' and knowledge.
    Permit me to be skeptical.

  86. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just email me instead. I am the master of the Web over at dfpresource. It is an org. Decode the anti-spam and you should be ok.

  87. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ahh...interesting. Unfortunately as it is I'm saddled with a low GPA from an extremely difficult school. Doesn't help that not everyone knows anything about the school. Sometimes I think having NO GPA at all would be better, as employers (if they even considered me) would be forced to look at what I can do instead.

  88. XGI isn't new, its trident and Xabre-Street creds. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "But remember that Linux only has a very small market-share (5%)."

    And Apple has what share? And they have support.

    "Also, remember that open-source zealots who browse slashdot all day are not representative of the Population value of all people who might buy a video card."

    Oh gee, at least you're not stereotyping people.

    Guess that makes you a reliable source.

  89. Inexpensive! by DivineHawk · · Score: 1
    "XGI is aiming for a street price of about $300 (plus tax), which is rather inexpensive."

    Does anyone with a clue agree with this quote? I know its relative, but $300 for one component of a gaming system is hardly inexpensive by any means.

    I guess I miss the day where $200 would get you the best. (tnt2 ultra $199)

    1. Re:Inexpensive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I guess I miss the day where $200 would get you the best. (tnt2 ultra $199)

      You didn't account for inflation or the fact that the economy was significantly better back then.

    2. Re:Inexpensive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...but $300 for one component of a gaming system is hardly inexpensive by any means."

      $300 for a gaming system is $100 too short. We're talking gaming systems here. Graphics cards costs around $400.

  90. PowerVR. by 13Echo · · Score: 1

    I like seeing new competition in this business, but I really wish that PowerVR had some new products on the way. Things were really promising with the Kyro series cards, but then ST closed their graphics division, ending any new licensing with PowerVR. I love my Kyro 2. Drivers are excellent on Windows and Linux, but sadly it's getting to a point where new games won't run too well with a GF2-class chip. It's still hanging in there though. I just jope that we'll see some of PowerVR series 5 soon.

    1. Re:PowerVR. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They haven't announced anything but PowerVR employees have contributed to an upcoming book featuring Pixel Shader 3.0 and Vertex Shader 3.0 code. :) (currently no cards on the market can support more than 2.0)

      There are two problems with the old PowerVR cards:
      a) no hardware T&L
      b) no cube map support

      The implications of the first are pretty obvious. As long as a game can run on a TNT it should be ok on the PowerVR; but once it expects T&L hardware then you might as well have Intel's integrated graphics hardware...

      At first no cube maps doesn't seem that bad; but there are more uses for cube maps than just reflections. For example if you want to do normal mapping you really need cube maps to normalize the lighting values or you may find as you get to the centre of a polygon it is only ~70% as bright as it should be. :( And to support OpenGL 1.3 or higher you need cube maps.

      I'm not a big fan of their old hardware as they cut too much in order to be cheaper than a GeForce, but I've got high hopes for their next stuff.

    2. Re:PowerVR. by N+Monkey · · Score: 1


      There are two problems with the old PowerVR cards:
      a) no hardware T&L
      b) no cube map support

      The implications of the first are pretty obvious. As long as a game can run on a TNT it should be ok on the PowerVR; but once it expects T&L hardware then you might as well have Intel's integrated graphics hardware...


      Actually the first is really not a big problem if you have a reasonable CPU. AFAIU there is a customisable option in the driver that tells these annoying applications that the system "does" have HW T&L and then runs it on the CPU. It often makes little difference to performance because you are probably fillrate limited anyway.

      Cube maps, OTOH, are more of a nuisance to work around. It's especially annoying if they're only being used normalise a few interpolated vectors for lighting. You could probably live with a few dimmer pixels.

  91. XGI Homepage by dennison_uy · · Score: 2, Informative

    More info on the Volari Duo straight from the XGI Homepage

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  92. Either FUD or Troll, I don't know by Murphy(c) · · Score: 1

    I had a Voodoo5 and a GF3-ti500 both the hottest cards out at the time. The Voodoo5 with only 2 CPU's kept up almost every game. But after the drivers stopped from 3DFX, you had to move to different hardware.

    I'm sorry, but this is really walking very close to the Troll Line(tm).

    The Voodoo5 was released around August 2000 while The GeForce3-Ti was released around October 2001. (ref: here)

    As a matter of fact their was an entire generation of nNvidia cards in between the GeForce2 and GeForce2 GTS.

    Let me quote what is said on this page about the speed you're claim of comparable speed between the two :
    During the following four months the Voodoo5 5500 proved to have the second best performance available, squeezing in between the Radeon and a GeForce2 GTS.

    And do note that, this is only compared to a GeForce2-GTS not even a GeForce3 or a GeForce3-Ti

    Also as a side note it's interresting to read back on the site that I've linked about the fact that nVidia, ATI and 3dFX where never really alone in the 3D market. PowerVR had an almost good successful prodect with it's KyroII line and SiS has always been pretty good in the the on-board/cheap-ass-but-works-ok line.

    Murphy(c)

  93. Budget performance needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is time for a $25 to $30 video chipset which hits the middle range Geforce 4 performance.

    Hardware mpeg 2/mpeg 4 encode/decode nice also.

  94. Support Free Software community and we'll help you by jbn-o · · Score: 1

    I concur. I wish more people understood the value of freedom (in its own terms and in terms of its practical impact--getting a new version of the Linux kernal and still be able to use the driver, being able to share the code with your friends and neighbors without legal problems, being able to inspect the code so you can be sure it's not doing anything bad) and demanded that from vendors.

    I'm happy to work with commercial interests that help the Free Software community, and I'm happy to recommend them on-air too (I'm host of "Digital Citizen"--alternate Wednesdays, 8-10 PM).

  95. Really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They should prevent asians from naming their cards and use someone else, from the marketing department perhaps?

  96. Re:Hi Mef by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently, someone let his cat play on the keyboard again.

  97. The resolution number you mention is mistaken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its supposed to drive 1280x1024 screens - total of three screens for 3840x1024.

    1. Re:The resolution number you mention is mistaken by Mattsson · · Score: 1

      Hmm... Well, I haven't actually tried one out but reading about it on matrox own site it says that it is supposed to drive one 22" LCD screen at 3840 x 2400 using two LFH-60 (that is two dual DVI connections = four DVI channels) for the same screen.
      Take a look here

      --
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  98. Re:fooey on Tom's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those bastards! How could they?!

  99. Actually, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The card made a very respectable showing given that it's running a beta chip with beta drivers. They have not spent man-years optimizing the drivers for specific games *cough*cheating*cough* and current game writers have optimized their game engines for ATI and nVidia chips, not the tile-based renderer used here. Look at /all/ the benchmarks, and notice that on a lot of things, this card performs on par with the best ATI and nVidia have to offer. It has the power, it just needs to be cleaned up. And it'll get faster as people write their games to the API, not to the hardware.

  100. Ah, but he does. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    because more than not, it's the truth. It's not pc, it's not you perhaps, but it is reality.

  101. Already tried a past 'alternative' by t0ny · · Score: 1
    I had a PowerVR KyroII, which was supposed to be a contender for the GeForce2. It was good, but... there is always a 'but'. The problem was once the card aged a bit. The drivers really didnt stay current, and support for the card was flakey in many games.

    Considering the company is dedicated to this chip, however, and not just licensing it (Hercules made the card, the chip was made by PowerVR), they may actually be a serious contender. Having been a previous owner of a Trident card (which was very good at the time; this was way back before 3dfx), and since they had historically focused on OEM sales, we *could* have a third option thrown into the fray.

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    1. Re:Already tried a past 'alternative' by N+Monkey · · Score: 1

      I had a PowerVR KyroII, which was supposed to be a contender for the GeForce2. It was good, but... there is always a 'but'. The problem was once the card aged a bit. The drivers really didnt stay current, and support for the card was flakey in many games.

      No! The drivers are still updated! The most recent releases for Windows AND LINUX are only about 1 week old. You can find them at the PowerVR Dev site. For some reason these are not yet on the main PowerVR downloads page but I suspect that it won't be too long before they appear.

      Simon

  102. Re:fooey on Tom's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um, the mere existence of the P4 Emergency Edition did much more harm than good to Intel's PR, at least among the sort of people who read Tom's and other such sites.

  103. Maybe i'm just browsing at +5 by t0qer · · Score: 1

    Or maybe nobodies mentioned this yet, but the article mentions all the problems with using multiple GPU's on an AGP bus, it just doesn't work right without some sort of kludge.

    What about PCI express? 2004 is supposed to be the year of PCI express's birth, and AGP's death. Does PCI express have a radically different setup that allows it to handle multiple chips in a SLI configuration better?

    1. Re:Maybe i'm just browsing at +5 by ob1knob777 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I've always wondered why the AGP spec sticks with 32 bits and keeps upping the clock instead of just switching over to 64 bit. A 64 bit bus like PCI-X would work nicely in this situation - one GPU on the lower 32 bits and one on the upper 32 bits. However, I think AGP will be around for awhile due to all the gfx specific features that PCI-X does not have.

  104. FUD-ometer: beep beep ... by jdkane · · Score: 1

    You could have referenced this set of graphs instead, just to provide a different point of view. Your post didn't save me that much time because I had to go back and look at all the graphs to find out that you referenced one of the worst. Too bad you didn't take the time to read about the beta part, and glad you are so loyal to ATI & nVidia because after all they are good cards. Ever since everybody woke up this morning, nothing has changed with bad /. posts.

    1. Re:FUD-ometer: beep beep ... by drix · · Score: 1

      Yeah I'll sure do that next time I'm about to fire up AquaMark 3 for some, immersive, pulse-pounding 3D action... although I have to admit I still think the gameplay in AquaMark 2 was a lot better and more balanced, in spite of the older engine. And who who could forget venerable AquaMark I: WaterSpot, which set the standard for 2D sidescrollers back in the early 90s.

      Ahh, good old AquaMark. Definitely the most apropos benchmark, and, seeing your point, certainly the one we should all be looking at.

      Now if you'll excuse me, I've gotta get back to playing UT 2003, where this chunk of turd is still dominated by ATI's and Nvidia's top-of-the-line, ca. 2001.

      --

      I think there is a world market for maybe five personal web logs.
  105. No, but there's a big push to get ppl to believe. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are also delivering less; aka unfinished drivers. 'fans' would have you believe in and commit to waiting for six to twelve months for functioning drivers. I'm amazed at the gaul of those who perpetuate the idea and the stupidity of the ones who go along with it.

  106. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Employers like me because I actually can use my skills to build something, not just repeat stuff I heard in school like a parrot without understanding.

    Well someone with a U degree woudln't repeat stuff from school anyway. At a real university they don't teach many directly applicable things anyway. They're not supposed to. That's what tech schools are for, and maybe that's what you're thinking of...

  107. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    It wasn't THAT long ago, you almost had to select your 3D card purchase based on how much you liked the "special edition" titles bundled in the box - because you never knew how many future games would actually be written to support the thing!
    ...
    The old line about "too many cooks spoiling the soup" holds true for too many competing brands on the video card marketplace, too.

    Yeah, it did before Direct3D. Why all those assholes couldn't just implement OpenGL (or parts of it) is beyond me. The sad thing is, if 3DFX had done MiniGL instead of GLIDE from the beginning, we probably wouldn't have to suffer with the craptacular nature of Direct3D today.

    We have unified 3D APIs for a reason, and that reason is to avoid specific hardware-accelerated games. Now the market can handle as many graphics cards manufacturers as people have money to support.

    --
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  108. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "a real university they don't teach many directly applicable things anyway. "

    Then why is a bachelor's REQUIRED for almost ANY job these days? Why is the human resources person who sits in at interviews and nods NEED A FOUR YEAR DEGREE FOR THAT?

    Because university is a self-perpetuating scam, a cult and the biggest fraud and threat to the western world. While we have to put off our lives longer and longer to get more and more papers, other societies are busy at work kicking our asses.

  109. Inflation doesn't account for the price hikes. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Inflation hasn't gone up 50-250% from that time
    and a better economy back then would mean lower prices for the poorer economy now.

    ps. the current ho-ha about a good economy is only on paper, in preparation for the upcoming election.

  110. Re:I don't really see your point. by Cyno · · Score: 1

    but hell I don't see what your problem with X11 is????

    I'm sorry you don't use Linux for anything more than 2D graphics. I use it for everything.

    I also have a Toshiba Satellite running Slackware. Works just fine until it crashes trying to play a video. Never have this problem on any desktop system using any video cards from Nvidia, Matrox or ATI.

    So I just won't be buying another Toshiba or Trident anytime soon. If they want my money they'll figure it out.

  111. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd like to see university return to what it used to be in some places. Students should start doing research as soon as they get in, and learn what they need to know a long the way. That's how it was in Germany before the Nazis came around, and it worked pretty well for them.

    Undergrad is just a way to get money to fund the real work.

  112. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by ob1knob777 · · Score: 1

    I second that motion.
    I whole heartedly agree because I've dealt with too many of these egotistical smarty-pants from prestigious universities. They would rather sit in a meeting and argue about the proper definition of a simple word than to move on and actually get something done.

  113. Hey! Don't be knocking aalib! Ascii porn is one of the greatest things ever!

    --
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  114. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hmm, my understanding of the situation was that Matrox lacks the staffing to put out decent drivers, and simply lacks modern equipment to make the cards physically able to go faster. It's a chicken and egg problem, they need to make the cards go faster to bring in the money, but they need the money to buy the hellishly expensive equipment to be able to make the cards go faster. That the Parhelia is as fast as it is with the ancient equipment they're said to be using (think: the kind of thing that S3 Virges were designed with), is a mirical. My guess is those few 'savants' you spoke of are pulling amazing things out of their hats despite all the factors against them.

  115. Glide killed 3dfx by upside · · Score: 1

    Sure, my friend with a GeForce Pro was jealous of how good Unreal Tournament looked on my Voodoo 3 2000 PCI, but it was useless with D3D. In the early days of 3D cards programmers would have to write separate drivers for the each family of graphics cards. Glide was the last vendor-specific API. The Voodoo 5 was stilborn because it was a Glide/OpenGL card released while everyone else was converging on D3D/DirectX. That and the OEM/STB sh*t.

    --
    I'm sorry if I haven't offended anyone
  116. XGI? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't XGI what USED to be Sis graphics division?

  117. Well, now that you mention it! by Animaether · · Score: 1

    CPU String: Intel Pentium(R) processor with MMX
    CPU Speed: 234 MHz
    Number of CPUs: 1
    Family: 5
    Model: 4
    Stepping: 3 :D

    But I must say that I respect you, Sir.. for it is the "My old keyboard got dirty, so I got a new one." crowd that drives the tech economy!
    Just imagine the horror if everybody still used their IBM Model-M*!

    - Children would no longer be able to spell words at the dumpheap with the found keycaps
    - soils across the world would lessen in chemical content, lowering the energy output of the potato battery
    - 10% of staff at recyling stations would have to find a new job, and a new source for their solder-fumes addiction

    But, most important of all..

    You would be unable to hit a single button that would open up your mail editor and start a blank e-mail.
    Ah yes, the things we do for convenience :)

    On a more serious note, keycap wear&tear is an important factor in determining keyboard usage statistics. For example, did you know that the left alt key is generally pressed in a bottom-right to top-left motion ? Or that the right half of the space bar is used twice as much as the left side for right-handed persons, and the other way around for left-handed ?

    A software programme analyzing just the texts typed doesn't provide this valuable** information, and watching / videotaping a person type for months at end is prohibitive. Keycap wear analysis is faster, cheaper, and more accurate!

    * http://www.modelm.org/mboard.html
    ** http://www.logickeyboard.com/

    1. Re:Well, now that you mention it! by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      I think you've missed the hidden subtext of my message; I personally had to buy a new keyboard after my K6-2 which I got rid of only a few years ago, and I decided to get another one about a year ago because it was a USB keyboard with a built-in passive hub which is a thing of beauty when I want to use the sliding keyboard drawer on my desk, or, for that matter, any usb part that I don't want to have to plug in the back of my machine.

      It's not like I go out and buy a new one every time it gets cruddy, but it's also not like the finish on the keyboard is nessessarily so easy to remove. I've used my laptop for probably millions of hours over the years, and it still has it's finish on th enter key (the arrow keys are another deal altogether).

      I wish I could still have my IBM, but it croaked on me, quite thoroughly. Even things designed to last die eventually. :(

      --
      It's been a long time.
  118. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by csirac · · Score: 1

    In Australia at least, the Unis have to compete with the tech schools for more and more students, since the Unis are getting less and less funding.

    Fact: Unis need funding. That means students. That means relevant, useful courses.

    Universities are educational institutions. That doesn't mean they can't be relevant. I'm doing a Micro-EE degree, and whilst there is a fair amount of "fairy" theory stuff I doubt I'll use every day (EG. Control systems theory, Finite Element/Difference Method modeling algorithms), the degree I'm doing is considered the most "practical" and useful in the state. In fact, next semester I'm starting a semester of "industry placement" where we do the equivilent of our final year project/thesis at an actual company who gives us the design task.

    As an undergrad with one more year of my 4 year EE degree, it would appear to me that the Job market wants experience. With the electronics industry in Australia going backwards at an alarming rate (there's what, 4 export quality PCB fabs left?) the job oppurtunities for a graduate with no practical design skills looks pretty grim.

    - Paul

  119. no, what you realy need is: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  120. Enlightenment by N+Monkey · · Score: 1

    So would all the other teenagers out there. Trust me, when you reach 30, you'll look back and think "God, I was an idiot!"

    It's OK, though, from what I hear when you reach 50 you look back at your 30s and say "God, I was an idiot!"


    Perhaps achieving enlightenment is coincidental with thinking "I am an idiot" :-)

  121. ahem. by syukton · · Score: 1

    I tried to submit this as a news story a few times a few weeks ago, and it was rejected. Regardless, I have to point out: Bitboys HAVE PRODUCED a product, and we should stop making fun of them on the front page. It is the first graphics chip to do actual curve rendering, supposedly. Check out their product page here:

    http://www.acceleon.com/

    --
    Reinvent the wheel only at either a lower cost, greater effectiveness, or your own personal enrichment and satisfaction.
  122. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 1

    Then why is a bachelor's REQUIRED for almost ANY job these days? Why is the human resources person who sits in at interviews and nods NEED A FOUR YEAR DEGREE FOR THAT?

    Because employers can afford to be picky. The job market sucks for individuals. It is flooded with candidates. They're using the "degree required" as a way to filter them down. Years of experience are required for almost any job these days too. Back in the dot-com days, you didn't need either. Maybe in the next few years you'll start to see requirements loosen up.

    Because university is a self-perpetuating scam, a cult and the biggest fraud and threat to the western world.

    Have you ever attended a university?

    While we have to put off our lives longer and longer to get more and more papers, other societies are busy at work kicking our asses.

    Who are these societies? When I was at the U, more than half of the people in the graduate CS program were Indians. In the CS undergrad program I personnally knew a Brit and a German, and our program isn't that big. 4 of the dept's 9 profs were Asian immigrants (ie, they had PhDs). And it was some no-name state university.

  123. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

    The only link I see on that page is the one about using the clock chip off a motherboard. Are you in the process of updating it or something?

    --
    I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  124. Re:Ehh... best of luck to them, but.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What kind of crack are you smoking? Any two-bit company can outsource all the hard physical stuff anyways. What expensive equipment is needed to make cards go fast? You lay out the PCB and get it built in Taiwan. Testing is done in Montreal, with SURPLUS CHEAP EQUIPMENT FROM THE NORTEL DEBACLE. ICs? Foundry is in some forsaken Asian country. Matrox needs to get the hell off the university crack pipe and hire people with real skills.

    Trust me, for peanuts you can get a quality RF lab going. Nortel was another of these university-obssessed shitholes of a company, where are they now? Hmmmm... I don't care, I'm quietly buying up all the used test gear and starting a business consulting on high-speed issues.

  125. Matrox by AmbyVoc · · Score: 1

    Hmm.. insmod mga_vid ?

    ---
    root@gaia linux # insmod mga_vid
    insmod: mga_vid: no module by that name found
    root@gaia linux # locate mga_vid /usr/lib/mplayer/vidix/mga_vid.so
    root@gaia linux # insmod /usr/lib/mplayer/vidix/mga_vid.so /usr/lib/mplayer/vidix/mga_vid.so: ELF file /usr/lib/mplayer/vidix/mga_vid.so not a relocatable object
    ---

    I would wery much be able to. Neither do the kernel sources have any clue to whether there is a mga_vid.o (?) anywhere.

    So where can I find this mysterious mga_vid module?

    --
    - Voice of Ambience -
    1. Re:Matrox by Uerige · · Score: 1

      The mga_vid module is a part of mplayer. It is not AFAIK in any of the precompiled packages, but it is in the sources (search the docs, it's in there).

    2. Re:Matrox by AmbyVoc · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, thanks for that. I'll be checking it out. :)

      --
      - Voice of Ambience -
  126. Oopsie... by AmbyVoc · · Score: 1

    A newline bug seemed to interveen my post.

    couple of br-tags should take care of it, I'll cut'n'paste again:

    root@gaia linux # insmod mga_vid
    insmod: mga_vid: no module by that name found
    root@gaia linux # locate mga_vid
    /usr/lib/mplayer/vidix/mga_vid.so

    root@gaia linux # insmod /usr/lib/mplayer/vidix/mga_vid.so
    /usr/lib/mplayer/vidix/mga_vid.so: ELF file /usr/lib/mplayer/vidix/mga_vid.so not a relocatable object

    --
    - Voice of Ambience -