Slashdot Mirror


ATI X1800 CrossFire Cards Reviewed

AnInkle writes "ATI finally joins the Christmas party. If money is (virtually) no object and high-end 3D animation is part of your game, you'll want to check out The Tech Report's review of the ATI X1800 CrossFire card before spending your green on the green team. From the review: 'This new CrossFire card also sweeps away some of the limitations of the first-generation CrossFire hardware introduced just a couple of months ago, allowing mega-high-res gaming.' Further, if the latest rumors about the 7800GTX 512MB are true, it would mean that this CrossFire graphics subsystem would arguably stand alone at the top of the graphics benchmarking mountain."

126 comments

  1. Will we start to see these high end cards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    getting released for the Macs now that Apple is using Intel CPUs?

    1. Re:Will we start to see these high end cards by ToasterofDOOM · · Score: 2, Informative

      you can already get high end GPUs, since ATI and Nvidia supply GPUs for Macs. Now that the high end Macs have PCI-e, they can use the same 7800s or Quadros a PC can. Their the graphics platform, so not releasing a high end card for OS X is unwise.

      --
      I am Spartacus
    2. Re:Will we start to see these high end cards by vought · · Score: 1

      Now that the high end Macs have PCI-e, they can use the same 7800s or Quadros a PC can

      Is this really true? I though Mac video cards (regarless of the interface) had to have big-endian support as well as the ability to enumerate on the Open Firmware device tree.

      Macs have had "standard" (electrically, anyway) AGP cards since the Graphite G4, but I know I've never been able to run down to Fry's and stick any old 8X AGP card into my G5. This will probably change with Intel Macs, but as for now, I don't think any old PCIe card will work, will it?

    3. Re:Will we start to see these high end cards by jest3r · · Score: 1

      I think this has more to do with drivers than anything else. Gaming companies are reluctanct to spend any time on driver development / optimization for Mac when the vast majority of the market use Wintels for gaming. This is actually Apple's fault for releasing underpowered home computers for the last 3 years. Hopefully this will change with Apple's switch to Intel (I own a Powerbook and a Mac Mini, both of which would run games like garbage no matter which video card was installed because the CPU is way too slow).

    4. Re:Will we start to see these high end cards by wolrahnaes · · Score: 1

      Bingo, we have a winner.

      There have been a few Mac/PC cross-platform video cards over the years, but all of these have accomplished this by having two BIOSes, one for Open Firmware and one for the PC BIOS.

      With the Intel Macs, at least in the dev kits, it is just a matter of drivers, and the current builds have at least partially functional ATI drivers. No nVidia drivers yet though...

      --
      I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
  2. Hack... by Chris+Bradshaw · · Score: 3, Informative
    Here is some info for those who have this card and want a little more out of it...

    http://www.hexus.net/content/item.php?item=3668

    --
    Get your Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool Here for FREE! - http://fedora.redhat.com
  3. classic slashdot article... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    14 pages of clicking through ads... lol

    Conclusions
    A Radeon X1800 XT CrossFire rig is mighty fast. Also, it's six degrees Fahrenheit outside right now at my place, and I've enjoyed the room-warming benefits of CrossFire and SLI systems throughout the preparation of this review. My mind boggles, though, when I try to consider the value proposition of plunking down $1200 for a pair of graphics cards and roughly $200 more for the motherboard. Could a pair of Radeon X1800 XT cards in CrossFire be a better deal than two GeForce 7800 GTX 512s in SLI?
    Yeah, I suppose so, especially with GTX 512 prices currently in low-altitude orbit. I do have my reservations about CrossFire, including the hassle of dealing with external dongles and the iffy I/O performance of CrossFire motherboards that use ATI's SB450 south bridge. Still, CrossFire performance generally scales well enough from one card to two, and I said in my initial CrossFire review that the long-term success of this solution would hinge on the quality of ATI's new GPUs. Turns out that the Radeon X1800 XT is a very desirable graphics card that matches the GeForce 7800 GTX feature for feature and adds a few new wrinkles of its own, including finer threading granularity for Shader Model 3.0 and the ability to do antialiasing with high-dynamic-range rendering. The Radeon X1800 XT trails the GeForce 7800 GTX 512 in overall performance, but Radeon X1800 CrossFire may hit the streets at prices as much as $150 lower per card than the 7800 GTX 512. (Radeon X1800 XTs are already widely available at $599 or less.) In the rarefied air of big-money graphics subsystems, that potential $300 price difference--if indeed it develops--could make a Radeon X1800 XT CrossFire system a, uh, er, uhm, solid value.

    Yeah, I said it.

    It's bitchin' fast, at any rate.

    Don't go buying a Radeon X1800 XL card, however, expecting to add a Radeon X1800 CrossFire card later if you care at all about value. Dropping a $599 CrossFire card into your system and lopping off half of its RAM and much of its performance potential isn't the brightest of moves. That solution sacrificies too much, in my view. You can get a dual-graphics solution involving a Radeon X1800 XL, but it's far from optimal. Perhaps in the future, if prices drop dramatically on the Radeon X1800 CrossFire Edition cards, teaming one up with an XL could make some sense. That seems like a shaky prospect to me, though.

    1. Re:classic slashdot article... by Frenchy_2001 · · Score: 1
      The Radeon X1800 XT trails the GeForce 7800 GTX 512 in overall performance, but Radeon X1800 CrossFire may hit the streets at prices as much as $150 lower per card than the 7800 GTX 512. (Radeon X1800 XTs are already widely available at $599 or less.) In the rarefied air of big-money graphics subsystems, that potential $300 price difference--if indeed it develops--could make a Radeon X1800 XT CrossFire system a, uh, er, uhm, solid value.


      It *could* indeed. The difference is that the GF7800GTX512 is available and sold right now, even if very expensive and hard to find (a proof of its success and popularity) while the RX1800 Crossfire is still nowhere to be seen.

      Vaporware will *ALWAYS* look more promising than real products... ;^)

      And you can be suer of one thing: if nVidia is retiring the GTX512 in February, it will have a replacement for that segment at that time. So far, nVidia's execution has been flawless for the GF7k family (GTX, GT and GTX512), having the 3 cards available at launch in quantities and before the competition.

      Anyway, those are like the Ferraris of the graphic world. Too expensive for most people... But competition is good and fast cycles push the trickle down. Right now, hardware capabilities grow faster than the software can use them (even latest games can be run at high rez with eye candy on the upper cards).
    2. Re:classic slashdot article... by buck_wild · · Score: 1

      "The difference is that the GF7800GTX512 is available and sold right now, even if very expensive and hard to find (a proof of its success and popularity)..."

      Wait...my local BestBuy is out of the Xbox 360! Could that mean that it's successful and popular???

      Ok, so I'm just kidding. Just be careful that marketing hype and sales-control isn't clouding your decision making. :)

      --
      If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
  4. Until Ati Supports Linux... by ZiakII · · Score: 0

    Until ATI fully supports Linux drivers... I'll pass, I know Linux isn't a gaming machine but seriously the drivers are horrible, on a machine with a X600.

    1. Re:Until Ati Supports Linux... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, I vowed never buy ATI. Besides there software suck's.

      Long live Nvidia.

  5. I'm confused by ToasterofDOOM · · Score: 2, Informative

    How would an improved Nvidia 7800 leave ATI at the top??? Unless I'm mistaken (and I'm not) more RAM is better for a GPU, making the 7800 with 512MB insane. The only way this works out is if the GTX is the lower end 7800, but even then it's impressive to have 512.

    --
    I am Spartacus
    1. Re:I'm confused by clutch110 · · Score: 1

      The rumor is that Nvidia is dropping the 7800GTX 512MB configuration.

    2. Re:I'm confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the ATI X1800XT has 512MB of RAM, the 7800GTX 512 is just like the GTX but with a much higher clock rate and a much higher price tag trumping even the X1800XT's $600 or so price.

    3. Re:I'm confused by ZiakII · · Score: 1

      How would an improved Nvidia 7800 leave ATI at the top??? Unless I'm mistaken (and I'm not) more RAM is better for a GPU, making the 7800 with 512MB insane. The only way this works out is if the GTX is the lower end 7800, but even then it's impressive to have 512.

      AFAIK RAM was not was better for a GPU, but only for textures for example you will see a upgrade in performance. In doom3 the better GPU only got you so far but for example on the highest setting modes it needed the 512 MB room to load all the textures in, the GPU doesn't need it, last time I was reading about it.

    4. Re:I'm confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are confused.

    5. Re:I'm confused by fitten · · Score: 1

      The other rumor is that Nvidia is coming out with a new core in that timeframe that is better/faster/etc.

  6. I don't think it stands alone ... by eldavojohn · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Further, if the latest rumors about the 7800GTX 512MB are true, it would mean that this CrossFire graphics subsystem would arguably stand alone at the top of the graphics benchmarking mountain.
    "Stand alone"? That's odd, when I read the article, I noticed this:

    ATI's recent driver optimizations for OpenGL are enough to vault the single Radeon X1800 XT ahead of the GeForce 7800 GTX 256MB, but the Radeon X1800 XT in CrossFire can't quite sustain that lead. The Radeon X1800 XL-based CrossFire rig can't catch the dual GeForce 7800 GTs, either. Still, the Radeon X1800 XT CrossFire system cranks out over 85 frames per second at 2048x1536. Like I said, it's a monster. Unfortunately for ATI, the GeForce 7800 GTX 512 is practically otherworldly.
    Notice how the author acknowledges that "the GeForce 7800 GTX 512 is practically otherworldly." Doesn't really sound like there's any argument to be had.
    --
    My work here is dung.
    1. Re:I don't think it stands alone ... by jonnythan · · Score: 1

      1) That quote was for Doom 3 and Doom 3 alone.

      2) The rumors, which would make "this CrossFire graphics subsystem would arguably stand alone at the top of the graphics benchmarking mountain" a true statement are the rumors that the 7800GTX 512 is going to be out of production shortly. As it is now, they're almost impossible to find already.

    2. Re:I don't think it stands alone ... by eldavojohn · · Score: 1

      Ok, I see what the original headline author meant but just because a card is discontinued doesn't mean it's out of the picture.

      You know the iPod mini was discontinued but I know people who still use those.

      I realized that quote was for Doom 3. What I was trying to say is that using "stand alone" to describe a card is dangerous. Different games, different settings, yeah, you're right. But having to say "well, it's the greatest for this game at this setting" doesn't mean it has no competition.

      It's an amazing card, I recognize that. But I just find it hard to believe it crushes even the 256MB 7800 GTX in all respects.

      --
      My work here is dung.
    3. Re:I don't think it stands alone ... by eldavojohn · · Score: 1
      As it is now, they're almost impossible to find already.
      This is very true. However, it seems to be because the demand is so high. Why would they halt production with a demand like that unless they're preparing another card with equal stats or possibly easier to manufacture?
      --
      My work here is dung.
    4. Re:I don't think it stands alone ... by StikyPad · · Score: 1
      That's odd, when I clicked the "latest rumors" link, I noticed this:
      CoolTechZone.com has the latest information from NVIDIA regarding the company's plans to discontinue its top of the line graphics card, the 7800GTX 512MB.
      Notice how the author acknowledges that "[NVIDIA] plans to discontinue its top of the line graphics card, the 7800GTX 512MB."

      So, yeah. That's what he meant by "stand alone." The other team forfeited.
    5. Re:I don't think it stands alone ... by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Right, just a shorter shelf life than usual. Doubtless they've developed a card with a better price/performance ratio, and the people who just bought the "top of the line," will be pissed that they shelled out all that cash. Fortunately, 20 years ago today, a sucker was born to replace the now disillusioned (and broke) early adopter.

    6. Re:I don't think it stands alone ... by Surt · · Score: 1

      You have to read the linked rumors, which explain that the 7800 GTX 512 may be no longer for sale as of real soon now. If those cards aren't available, then the x1800xt appears a lot more favorably.

      What the rumors leave out of course is that the 7800 gtx 512 will be replaced by something better.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    7. Re:I don't think it stands alone ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gosh, could it perhaps be that they will "discontinue" the model in order to replace it with something even faster?

      Nah, couldn't be...

    8. Re:I don't think it stands alone ... by pnewhook · · Score: 1
      ATI's recent driver optimizations for OpenGL are enough to vault the single Radeon X1800 XT ahead of the GeForce 7800 GTX 256MB, but the Radeon X1800 XT in CrossFire can't quite sustain that lead.

      If there is one area that ATI really sucks in is their OpenGL drivers.

      In my experience, OpenGL applications run several times faster on nVidia hardware than on equivalent ATI hardware. I refuse to buy ATI anymore as I've got screwed over too many times with their shitty OpenGL drivers.

      --
      Tesla was a genius. Edison however was a overrated hack who liked to torture puppies.
  7. Drop the nternet myths by mkavanagh2 · · Score: 1, Troll

    ATi works with linux great. There's an internet myth that "If you use Linux, you must use nVidia", and it's nonsense. Just like the "Azureus is useless because it's Java" myth. Or the "Redhat is the best distro for nubs" myth, but thankfully I think that one's finally evaporating.

    1. Re:Drop the nternet myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many nubs does a newb need? Please learn to spell.

    2. Re:Drop the nternet myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, perhaps this will disappear when ATI's linux drivers no longer offer half the performance they provide under Windows (Yes, I've tested this myself with recent drivers in the last month). Sorry, but if nVidia can provide nearly identical performance under both OSs, then ATI is going to stay off my linux system. I'll give it to ATI that their drivers are at least mostly stable under Linux these days, but performance has to improve before I consider them a viable alternative.

      It's hardly a myth when it's true.

    3. Re:Drop the nternet myths by krbvroc1 · · Score: 1
      There's an internet myth that "If you use Linux, you must use nVidia", and it's nonsense.

      Well this 'myth' is based on one time fact. ATI was very hostile to linux and refused to support it in the earlier days. If you wanted to run an accelerated video card under linux you needed nVidia who at least provided closed source binary drivers. Also, nVidia drivers under linux are much better than ATI in terms of performance.

    4. Re:Drop the nternet myths by halber_mensch · · Score: 2, Informative
      Well this 'myth' is based on one time fact. ATI was very hostile to linux and refused to support it in the earlier days.

      I suppose that's the reason that ATI has been actively involved in contributing developer time and source code the DRI X extension project since it started? And NVidia has done *what* exactly with DRI now? Seriously, if you want your platform to simply be a free version of windows with the same limitations and lack of support given by closed source proprietary drivers, be my guest. I for one will be sticking with ATI, and enjoying the fact that my acceleration architecture isn't just a clumsy libGL hack.

      --
      perl -e "eval pack(q{H*},join q{},qw{70 72696e74207061636b28717b482a7d2c717b343 637323635363534323533343430617d293b})"
    5. Re:Drop the nternet myths by Buelldozer · · Score: 1

      "Ati works great."

      Well that's news! Would you please come over here and explain that to my OpenSuSE10 installation with an ATI Radeon 9500 Pro 128 in it?

      I mean, YOU may know that ATI drivers are great and I may know that ATI drivers are great but OpenSuSE seems, shall we say, less then convinced.

      What I really mean to say is that I spent 4+ hours combing through every How-To that Google could locate, downloading every driver that any idjut on the Internet had _ever_ recommended and OpenSuSE stubbornly refused to enable OpenGL.

      ATI Drivers = Crap - At least as far as OpenSuSE is concerned.

    6. Re:Drop the nternet myths by krbvroc1 · · Score: 1

      To me there are several levels of expectation. First, I prefer an open source driver. If that is not available and I have to select a proprietary card (which you do in the accelerated graphics arena), then I prefer one which performs on par with their windows driver -- that is where nvidia beats ATI. nVidia uses a unified driver architecture so that a large portion of the code (95%?) is code shared with the windows driver which means it gets more testing, engineering support and performance tweaking.

    7. Re:Drop the nternet myths by mkavanagh2 · · Score: 1

      No, you've got it wrong. OpenSuSE = crap; as far as supporting ATi is concerned. Other distributions package ATi's drivers themselves and they work amazingly. Maybe you should look into them.

    8. Re:Drop the nternet myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously joo are the noob, fucktard. There can be no incorrect spelling when dealing with made-up, retarded words.

    9. Re:Drop the nternet myths by DeathPenguin · · Score: 1

      nVidia's driver may be closed source at the core, but they've done a commendable job in making their driver work on a wide variety of machines including Itanium, Solaris, FreeBSD, and 64-bit Linux. A couple years ago they changed the licensing terms of their driver package so that distros like SuSE, Gentoo, Debian, etc. could make their own packages and distribute them, package them with installers, etc. On top of that, the Linux performance is on par with the Windows drivers, they fully support *all* GeForce chips (Not just workstation, desktop, or mobile), and they even do SLI in Linux now.

      Even to this day, I don't think ATi's gotten even close. Correct me if I'm wrong, but AFAIK you still have to download the driver from ATi and *pray* that their installer works for your distro. ATi's support only goes up to their 8500 line (Like 2 years old), and even then performance is signifficantly lower than what you get in Windows. If you want performance, you're screwed since your $150 Radeon will perform like a $50 GeForce. I don't even want to get into trying to get 3D acceleration on a Radeon 7200 working...

    10. Re:Drop the nternet myths by mkavanagh2 · · Score: 1

      You're wrong, look to wisdom from afar to lead you back onto the path of truth. That is, the post right above yours.

    11. Re:Drop the nternet myths by StikyPad · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Now all you need is for someone to release a game for Linux and you'll be all set.

    12. Re:Drop the nternet myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're talking out of your ass.

    13. Re:Drop the nternet myths by DeathPenguin · · Score: 1

      Thanks for pointing that out. I checked out what Gentoo has to offer (Since that's my distro of choice) and they have an ebuild available for r350, r300, r250 and r200 chipsets; I had it backwards. However, they do not appear to support x800 and x18xx products. If you go the ATi route you are still behind by at least a generation.

      For reference as far as performance goes, compare this ATi x300 benchmark to this nVidia GeForce 6600GT benchmark. Unfortunately I could not find a GeForce 6200TC comparison as that chip is much closer to the x300 in price. The ATi card is about $40 cheaper than the 6600GT on Pricewatch now, but the performance difference is in the range of 2x-5x in favor of the 6600GT across the board. In Enemy Territory, the 6600GT gets over a hundred FPS at 1280x1024 high quality (HQ) while the x300 gets a dismal 20 at the same settings. In Doom 3, the 6600GT manages to get 50 FPS at 1280x1024 in HQ while the x300 gets less than 10 at 640x480 in HQ. The 6600GT gets 53FPS in the Quake 4 1280x1024 low quality benchmark, while the x300 gets 21 in low quality. Unfortunately Phoronix didn't include a UT2004 benchmark for the 6600GT, but I think we can guess who wins there.

      If performance isn't important, then you may as well get a Matrox G400 or something. Hell, XGI might even be a good choice since they might even go the open source route with drivers.

    14. Re:Drop the nternet myths by the_humeister · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about? There are plenty of commercial games out for Linux: Doom 1-3, Quake 1-4, Unreal Tournament, Unreal Tournament 2003-4, Serious Sam... Well here's a more extensive list

    15. Re:Drop the nternet myths by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Well, I was making a joke, but it was based on the reality that an exhaustive list of Linux games is roughly the same length as a list of new releases for Win32. Nobody chooses Linux for the games, they choose it despite the games, or lack thereof.

      But even if it wasn't a joke, saying Linux has plenty of games is like saying that 640k of RAM ought to be enough for anybody.

    16. Re:Drop the nternet myths by buck_wild · · Score: 1

      I got the joke, but I'm surprised at the lack of "Psh! All I need is a green-screen for NetHack!" responses.

      --
      If all you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.
    17. Re:Drop the nternet myths by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Me too.. I guess it's just that time of the month. ;)

    18. Re:Drop the nternet myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      /* Parent */
      Correct me if I'm wrong, but AFAIK you still have to download the driver from ATi and *pray* that their installer works for your distro. ATi's support only goes up to their 8500 line (Like 2 years old), and even then performance is signifficantly lower than what you get in Windows. /* Parent */

      Sure. That's easy. You can download the driver from ATI or from distros that have packages ready for you (Ubuntu, Debian, Gentoo,...). Perhaps you distro doesn't have a package ready? Well, for those cases, you can download the ATI Installer and *GENERATE* packages for your distribution (if it's available: RedHat, All of SuSE, Mandriva, Ubuntu, Debian, ...) - name another driver that plays nice with Distro packaging (Not NV).

      The Radeon 8500 was launched in August 2001 (according to hardware analysis's article).
      Half the performance of Windows? I think not. I doubt you know much about benchmarking (not a personal attack but a general statement; most "benchmarking" sites don't really understand what they are benchmarking nor how even). You probably were comparing OpenGL under Linux to DX under Windows.

      There's also the wiki that details how to install on OpenSuSE; heck even the guys at SuSE have dedicated pages with hints for getting ATI drivers to install on OpenSuSE if all else fails:
      http://wiki.cchtml.com/index.php/Main_Page

    19. Re:Drop the nternet myths by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh, sniz-ap, j00 got pwnzored.

  8. Renderman rendering by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ATI should be making these GPU's so that they can be networked and do the rendering for 3D animation (non real time). That way, movies like King Kong etc. can be rendered on graphics specific chips or even multi gpu boards boards instead of the x86 chips they are currently rendered on.

    1. Re:Renderman rendering by thesupraman · · Score: 1

      They are, specifically on NVidia hardware. Gelato.

      NVidia care about this kind of market, hence they have WORKING OpenGL drivers, something ATI done care about (even though they like to claim OpenGL 2.0 functionality without even supporting the base requirements in hardware!)

  9. Too expensive! by gasmonso · · Score: 3, Insightful

    At a cost of $1200, you're better off getting an XBox 360, a PS3, and the new Nintendo. You'll probably have a couple bucks left over for lunch. Just way too uch money for the average Joe. But I bet some uber Slashdot users already have them :)

    gasmonso http://religiousfreaks.com/
    1. Re:Too expensive! by Daveznet · · Score: 5, Informative

      My friend that works at ATI was able to view this card in action at the labs and the demos were amazing but he told me ATI continues to lack in the driver department. He informed me that there is about 1 floor working on drivers which is about 60 people and they have not been up to par with the hardware that they seem to be producing. Hes gotten his hands on a couple of their video cards for testing and many of them have crashed his computer forcing him to format/reinstall his operating system. IMHO, I think that ATI should really look into improving their driver support.

      --
      GL HF!
    2. Re:Too expensive! by nb+caffeine · · Score: 1

      from my expirence, I would agree. Even way back in the day (1999), their drivers have been awful, imho. Dont remind me of that awful ATI All in Wonder Pro card I was forced to use.

      --

      "Something's wrong with you...and I hope we never do meet again." - Deftones When Girls Telephone Boys
    3. Re:Too expensive! by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1
      At a cost of $1200...

      Don't get me wrong - high end graphics are really a phenominal achievment, damn sexy, and just wicked cool. But does anyone else expect that ten years from now, our entire computers will be PCI Super Express cards that sit inside of NVidia's latest dual GPU graphics processing boxes?

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    4. Re:Too expensive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      /me wonders at what point gasmonso is going to learn how to use the signature field

    5. Re:Too expensive! by gasmonso · · Score: 1

      Wow, 60 people on drivers and they still have poor Linux support! Sounds like poor leadership to me. Don't get me wrong, I proudly own a Radeon 9800, but I'm afraid to upgrade drivers because I've been burned in the past.

      http://religiousfreaks.com/
    6. Re:Too expensive! by timeOday · · Score: 1
      At $1200, with its own motherboard and requiring 4 PCI bays, it certainly seems to be for purpose-built systems. But is ATI targeting Nintendo or SGI?

      Such high resolution seems more important for CAD than Quake. But the benchmarks are all about games. What is ATI's intended market?

    7. Re:Too expensive! by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      At $1200, you're better off spending $800 on a system that will play every current game at high speed and using the remaining $400 for something else... Games, bills, whatever. Or better yet, save it for 6 to 8 months, and spend it on a card that will be better than what you would have had if you spent the $1200 up front, that also uses less power. All that, and you don't even lose any enjoyment, because your lesser card runs practically as well in the meantime. Unless, of course, what you really enjoy is bragging about your benchmark results.

    8. Re:Too expensive! by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      What is ATI's intended market?

      Rich kids who care more about bragging about their benchmark scores than playing games...

      Which, incidentally, is a market that is just the right size to extract the maximum amount of profit out of while the yields still suck on their latest chips.

      The high end market is a place for these manufacturers to test and refine their manufacturing process before selling to the mass market.

    9. Re:Too expensive! by Atmchicago · · Score: 1

      Considering the costs and benefits of Linux support, I can't imagine they have that many working on it. That said, their Linux support has gotten a lot better more recently. The major problem is you can't expect the latest kernel to work with their drivers, which I can deal with.

      --

      You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it dissolve.

    10. Re:Too expensive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *cough*bullsh!t*cough*

    11. Re:Too expensive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only a moron reinstalls because of the driver, you can disable any of that shit easily and back it out.

    12. Re:Too expensive! by rifter · · Score: 1

      Only a moron reinstalls because of the driver, you can disable any of that shit easily and back it out.

      One might think so. But it turns out there are some very crappy driver installers out there that make changes you can't easily back out of. XP restore points can sometimes help, but even then you can't get rid of all the vestiges and the some times those vestiges cause problems. Sometimes it is so bad you can't boot the system even in safe mode. Sometimes you just see other problems and no amount of reinstalling can get you back in a state where your hardware works. I've seen this with Intel network drivers and I am not surprised it happens with video drivers, since once your video driver is screwed in windows you are pretty much screwed. Yes, safe mode with standard VGA is the standard answer here, but I have seen video drivers do naughty things that end up breaking or otherwise replacing the standard VGA driver, and since Windows has no real command prompt rescue (the rescue comand prompt is in a WINDOW) you're screwed.

      The windows repair install sometimes helps (talking here about the second repair option that replaces the drivers) , but here it will only work if the repair install can replace what was thrown in by the bad driver, and once you've established that the driver is violating good behaviour for a driver installer all bets are off here. If the problem arises from registry changes outside of the scope of what the driver should have used or files laid down all over the hard drive.. well.. you'll have fun fixing that.

      Besides the person in question was working as a tester for drivers. Only a moron sets up a test box without making images of the test box and reloading the original in between tests! :D

    13. Re:Too expensive! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No shit. After thinking ATI was so wonderful and my friend telling me about their open source linux drivers, I went to buy a 9600XT. Oh, driver no longer open source, buggy as all hell (windows drivers), and absolutely shithouse linux support. Fuck ATI.
      A few days ago I bought a new video card and while deciding what to buy my number 2 priority was "not ATI" (no 1 was AGP).

  10. If money is (virtually) no object by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can pay with virtual money? Cool! How much of real money space do I need for swapping?

    1. Re:If money is (virtually) no object by WhiteWolf666 · · Score: 1

      It's called credit, and loans. ;-)

      --
      WhiteWolf666 an exBush supporter. All you new-school,compassionate,save the children Republicans can rot in hell
    2. Re:If money is (virtually) no object by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called credit, and loans. ;-)

      Riiiiiight... When I think about what I want to be doing 18 months from now, it sure as hell ain't making the last few payments on my outdated video cards.

  11. GTX 256's by DeadBugs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The GTX 256's perform at or near the X1800XT's (looking at the linked benchmarks). These cards will cost you at least $400 less for a pair, use a single slot design, run cooler and quieter.


    **(And yes they now support Linux in SLI).

    --
    http://www.kubuntu.org/
    1. Re:GTX 256's by pl1ght · · Score: 1

      Its great and all that ATI supports this under Linux. But have many of you really tried using ATI cards + 3d Acceleration? First its horrible to setup depending on your kernel version. Secondly the performance in OpenGL games under linux is absolutely Horrid. Im talking 30fps in UT2k4 with a 9800pro with EVERYTHING down. This is common too, not just a case by case situation. Also, Cedega run games have major troubles and compatibility issues. ATI just isnt a very good option for the linux users ATM. For windows its great for the price.

    2. Re:GTX 256's by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but do they run Linux?

    3. Re:GTX 256's by Ryan+Amos · · Score: 1

      Yep, NVidia at least produces binary drivers for Linux. ATI has nothing.

    4. Re:GTX 256's by forkazoo · · Score: 1

      No. Nobody has a working C -> GLSL compiler working yet, AFAIK. I think the next few generations will allow pointer manipulation in the shading languages, then we can start to look at really silly things like OS ports.

      You can use them with Linux though. :)

  12. Not great, they suck. by SalsaDoom · · Score: 2, Informative

    No, it doesn't work great.

    ATI's drivers are painfully unstable, there are lots of ways to hardlock a linux system with ATI's buggy shit drivers. An easy one is to use xinerama and kdm, at least from my experience. A whole lot of features of standard X11 drivers are missing (Composite, for example) and the performance is still a good 30% slower then it is on windows. The regular unaccelerated drivers from Xorg are way faster for regular 2d rendering and support all the usual features.

    You call that great? Its fuckin not. ATI's linux support is -improving slowly-, but it is improving. But there is no way its great, or even good. Or even mediocre. It sucks. Binary drivers *SUCK ASS*, and I hate having to put up with them for 3D acceleration ;(

    --
    "Computers will never truly be free until the last windows user is strangled with the entrails of the last mac user."
    1. Re:Not great, they suck. by MetalliQaZ · · Score: 2, Informative
      there are lots of ways to hardlock a linux system with ATI's buggy shit drivers


      There are lots of ways to hardlock a linux system PERIOD. You don't even need ATI's drivers.

      -d
      --
      "Here Lies Philip J. Fry, named for his uncle, to carry on his spirit"
    2. Re:Not great, they suck. by mkavanagh2 · · Score: 1

      Composite? Ahahahaha. Yeah, that's a standard X11 driver alright. Standard as my ass.

  13. I'm waiting for the R580 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm hearing it may only be 2 months away. More like the Xenos of the 360 in arch. Frankly my 9700 pro is chugging along quite nicely. If you're going to force me to dump this perfectly good AGP 8x motherboard, I'm waiting for a real jump in arch, and the R520 just ain't it.

  14. If you've never owned a Radeon Mobility... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...then you have no frame of reference and should probably not speak on the subject of ATI's Linux support. If you own a laptop and want 3D hardware accelleration on Linux, nVidia's generally your only choice. You MAY be able to get particular ATI cards to work with a whole lot of headache, but with the nVidia cards you have a sure thing and can be comfortable knowing the company ACTUALLY CARES whether or not you can use their hardware effectively on Linux. For me it doesn't make that much of a difference when I do laptop shopping. Restricting oneself to machines using nVidia cards SEVERELY limits your choices, and all of the 3D games I play are Windows-only. However, nVidia does support Linux FAR better than ATI, especially for mobile computing.

  15. sigh by Andy+Gardner · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I wish there weren't idiots out there who'll pay £370 for a graphics card. That way these companies wouldn't be able to charge the exorbinate prices they do and I'd be able to afford one!
    Honestly who's daft enough to pay for bleeding edge technology so they can run at 1600x1200 instead of 1280x960.

    1. Re:sigh by bprime · · Score: 1

      I wish there weren't idiots out there who'll pay £370 for a graphics card. That way these companies wouldn't be able to charge the exorbinate prices they do and I'd be able to afford one!

      I know EXACTLY how you feel. Just the other day, I saw a BMW M3 drive buy, and thought the exact same thing. It's not fair that people will pay for luxury goods! By doing so, they deprive the lower classes of the same goods! High-income consumers have a responsibility to the lower income classes to only by cheap things!
      Wait a second, I just remembered - if no one paid the price they were asking for this good, they would STOP MAKING IT. The price of marketing and production wouldn't suddenly drop to accomodate the fact that no one's willing to pay that much.

    2. Re:sigh by DeathPenguin · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Considering how video cards have recently overtaken CPUs in complexity, I don't think they're charging too terribly much. Not only do you get more transistors in a modern GPU than a Pentium 4, but also 256-512MB of GDDR3 RAM. Granted, this sort of power isn't necessary for a lot of people. That's why both nVidia and ATi offer cheaper versions of their flagship cards with similar capabilities, only slower. For example, the GeForce 6200 and the Radeon x300 are both decent gfx cards that are available for around $50.

      I wonder if ATi and nVidia even comes close in terms of profit margins on GPUs as Intel does on CPUs...

    3. Re:sigh by Andy+Gardner · · Score: 1
      Rubbish, and your analogy is way off. Yea, right, if people don't pay what companies ask then they'll stop making them... Infact it works the other way round, companies charge what they think consumers are willing to pay.

      If people stopped paying the premium price they currently pay for bleeding edge technology, (which drops in price in however many months when ATI or Nvidia make the next 'breakthrough') they wouldn't artificially inflate the prices in the first place.

    4. Re:sigh by heinousjay · · Score: 1

      What we need is a system where a governmental body can set a maximum price on all consumer goods, and then use their powers to force the various companies to continue to produce said goods in the event that the set price provides no incentive to produce the good.

      Or do you have a better idea? I'm not too sure mine will work, and I'm tapped.

      --
      Slashdot - where whining about luck is the new way to make the world you want.
  16. video card regrets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    One of my regrets in life is all the money I wasted on new CPUs, RAM and video cards (remember the Diamond Monster 3d? the GeForce 3? The Radeon 9700 OEM?) back in the 90s just to play the latest games. And all those hours reconfiguring config files to squeeze the last resources available.

    I wish I had all those hours back, and all that money. I never got my money's worth. I still have a Radeon 9700 OEM in a PC downstairs. Granted it's got a better picture for watching movies on TV than my GeForce 3, but still, what a waste. What I don't get is why my parents or girlfriend-then-wife never set me straight. I guess they thought I'd be happy.

    sigh. if only I'd spent those hours working on my career. if only i'd saved that money or spent it on cool experiences i could look back on

  17. Well... by heli0 · · Score: 1

    "Further, if the latest rumors about the 7800GTX 512MB are true..."

    http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=28227
    "[Nvidia's next-gen card] is expected in early February and Nvidia is already playing with these cards."

    So it would suprise anyone that they would discontinue the old card when they launch a new high-end card? Why is that a 'rumor', it is common sense.

    --
    Whenever the offence inspires less horror than the punishment, the rigour of penal law is obliged to give way...
    1. Re:Well... by Hack+Jandy · · Score: 1

      Whenever I see someone link to the inquirer, I am constantly amazed. See previous rants for reasons why not to read the inquirer.

      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=170190&cid=141 84150

      HJ

  18. Just speculation by ironwill96 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    But is it possible that the reason Nvidia is discontinuing their high-end card in February of 2006, is because they are releasing a NEW card that will probably trounce anything ATI has out.

    Just a thought..considering that it seems about time for Nvidia to release a new GPU in the next 3 months or so.

    --
    "To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield." - Tennyson
    1. Re:Just speculation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speculation off. Nvidia retracts the card because people know how fast it is and they've set the mark to beat. It probably cost them an arm and a leg to do it but they've made their point and NV fanboys can stick it to their ATI counterparts that Nvidia has a faster card (though non-existent if you wish to buy). It's a good move by Nvidia - put out a card that's super fast and you lose money on and then yank it after.

      GPU cycles are 6 months per generation; even with leapfrog design, this number isn't changing much.

  19. Agreed! by Hakubi_Washu · · Score: 1

    Everyone who thinks otherwise may come over and get them shitty binary drivers (and their evil companion, the installer) to run on my 64bit SuSE 9.1 (a lot of that is probably due to SuSEs directory changes, but without fucking docs from Ati there's no way to correct this). One of the reasons I still keep a WinXP install, otherwise I would've gone wine long ago.
    Gladly, there's the R300 project (not usable, but on the way...)

  20. slightly more sensible perspective by SuperBanana · · Score: 2, Informative
    http://shsc.info/PCPartsPickingGuide#titelanker13

    If you skip down to the section on motherboards, they show that SLI isn't even remotely worth it.

    1. Re:slightly more sensible perspective by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Let me get this straight..

      One top of the line product, Model-Y, costs twice as much as the next best, Model-X, yet performs only 3% better. And two Model Y's together perform roughly 5% better than one Model-X at 4 times the cost. And you're suggesting that this is somehow a bad deal?

      Interesting theory. Maybe you could call it "The Law of Diminishing Returns." Or something...

  21. ATI MissFire!!! by maizena · · Score: 2, Funny

    I just love the way that the guys at nvidia refer to this ATI technology. It's not CrossFire, It's MissFire.

    1. Re:ATI MissFire!!! by DeathPenguin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      >>I just love the way that the guys at nvidia refer to this ATI technology. It's not CrossFire, It's MissFire.

      Their drivers seem to miss Linux almost entirely :-P

  22. In Case You Missed It... by ewhac · · Score: 1
    ATI released v8.20.0 of their proprietary Linux driver last week. The new driver apparently now handles system suspend and resume correctly, which is good news for laptop owners.

    Schwab

  23. Marketing ignorance strikes again! by deacon · · Score: 3, Funny
    Note to marketing:

    The definition of the word "crossfire" as it pertains to a physical object:

    A short circuit between two spark plug wires on an engine which causes a cylinder to fire at the wrong time, or causes more than one cylinder to fire at a time. It is a BAD THING (tm).

    Now, it is perfectly normal that Chrysler pick the same word for one of their new cars, truth in advertising and all that. But the people at ATI don't want to have a name associated with a malfunctioning ignition system.

    1. Re:Marketing ignorance strikes again! by Twisted64 · · Score: 1

      They probably took the much more common definition - two lines of (gun)fire converging at a point - which serves their purpose perfectly well. Not that we should believe everything dictionary.com has to say (they think "color" and "neighbor" are words), but in this case I think they've got it right.

      http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=crossfire

      --
      Consciousness is a myth. Trust me.
    2. Re:Marketing ignorance strikes again! by Surt · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'm pretty sure that they are not making analogy with cars, but rather with KKK cross burning. As in 'these things are as hot as a KKK cross fire!' I'm sure you'll see a fold out in Computer Gaming World any time now with such imagery selling these cards.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    3. Re:Marketing ignorance strikes again! by wbren · · Score: 1
      A short circuit between two spark plug wires on an engine which causes a cylinder to fire at the wrong time, or causes more than one cylinder to fire at a time. It is a BAD THING (tm).
      Wrong! It's quite clear they are referring to the semi-popular circa 1989 board game "Crossfire". Surely you remember the commercial where two kids are battling each other in Crossfire. The theme song was very 80's and very cool. I went something like "Crossfire! You'll get caught up in the ... CROSSFIRE! You'll get caught up in the ... crossFIRE ... CROSSfire.. crossfire ... CROSSFIRRRRRRRRRRE!"

      Ok, so maybe it was cooler in the 80's.
      --
      -William Brendel
    4. Re:Marketing ignorance strikes again! by Eternal+Vigilance · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they're CNN political talk show junkies? Working on the next big thing in American political discourse?

      (Cue James Earl Jones:)

      "Fed up with being lied to by the self-serving members of the political establishment? Insulted by the bullshit arguments they expect you believe? Ready to convince the Beltway Boys that the cost-benefit analysis is always negative when you fuck with democracy?

      You can bet Robert Novak will be spilling his guts about outing undercover CIA operative Valerie Plame...when he's caught in your CrossFire!"

    5. Re:Marketing ignorance strikes again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are words.

  24. Better have a good PSU... by ruiner13 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Holy crap, batman, any of these SLI/Crossfire modes will need quite a robust power supply. Even at idle in those configurations they'll pull about 150W, but when in max use can draw over 400W of power! I guess playing high-end games these days also comes with a big hit to your electric bill. Cripes! People might need to get a second job just to play games.

    --

    today is spelling optional day.

    1. Re:Better have a good PSU... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is abit misleading as the measurements where taken from the wall socket (not including the monitor.

      So at idle those readings would include the complete computer, but when under load those monster graphics cards certainly do draw a lot of power, the CPU would also take a nice piece of that too.

    2. Re:Better have a good PSU... by friedmud · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... Having a fairly beefy computer and dual LCD monitors I thought I would go lookup what some of my other appliances around my house pull for comparison.

      According to:

      http://michaelbluejay.com/electricity/howmuch.html

      Oven: 5000 Watts
      Clothes Dryer: 5000 Watts
      Water Heater: 3800 Watts
      Air Conditioner: 3500 Watts
      Microwave: 1500 Watts
      Refrigerator: 500 Watts (mine is fairly large)
      32" TV: 150 Watts (Estimate)

      My Computer at Idle: 150 Watts
      My Computer While Playing a game: 350 Watts

      Now I'm too lazy to do the math.... but it's fairly apparent to me atleast that the computer is just going to be a drop in the bucket compared to the refrigerator, air condition (or heater), and water heater all of which run for a considerable amount of time during the day.

      So even though 400W seems like a lot... it _really_ isn't. Plus... it isn't at 400W very often (atleast not unless you're a teenager with nothing better to do.... but then _you're_ not responsible for the bills either ;-) most of the time it's going to hum along at around 150 Watts or even be powered off for a lot of people (mine is on 24/7).

      Friedmud

  25. Lack of documentation by Quasar1999 · · Score: 1

    The problem may be that all 60 driver developers are sub par.. but having worked at a contract house that created custom drivers for ATI chips, I can safely say that with the hardware register references that were given to us by ATI, I was amazed to even get the video card to switch resolutions properly. The engineers doing the hardware over at ATI might be awesome, but they can't document worth shit!

    --

    ---
    Programming is like sex... Make one mistake and support it the rest of your life.
    1. Re:Lack of documentation by Daveznet · · Score: 1

      Oh I completely agree with you there, there are alot of communication issues between the engineers and developers from what my friend tells me. Which could be the root problem of their sub par drivers. Documentation though Im pretty sure most developers hate to do is key to a good development process.

      --
      GL HF!
    2. Re:Lack of documentation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *cough* ALT employee *cough*

    3. Re:Lack of documentation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LMAO... that's EX-ALT employee...

  26. widescreen by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to think the same regarding running games at high resolution. Looking at reviews I usually ignore the high resolution, if it runs well at 1024x768 thats good enough for me.
    Then I bought a widescreen monitor, mainly for photoshop works, and found out most games supports widescreen starts at 1680x1080. Some games do allow lower resolution and change the perspective, but the majority needs to set at least 1680x1080.
    Still I really think video cards more than $200 is a luxury. More than $300 is plain insane. I end up bought a used 6800GT for $200. Its a luxury but its hard to resist when I have a 24" widescreen begging to be used for gaming.

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

      I hate you. I am reading slashdot on a 12inch monocrome (orange) moniter right now.

  27. a much worse possibility by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The definition of the word "crossfire" as it pertains to a physical object:

    A short circuit between two spark plug wires on an engine which causes a cylinder to fire at the wrong time, or causes more than one cylinder to fire at a time. It is a BAD THING (tm).


    And here I always thought a "cross fire" was something that the KKK would do before lynching people...

  28. Are you on crack? by a.different.perspect · · Score: 0, Troll

    As someone with a Radeon 9600 XT who plays UT 2004 on Linux at 60% the speed he does on Windows, I think you are.

  29. Hard to get excited by amightywind · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is hard to get excited about bleeding edge graphics cards, because ATI and NVidia refuse to publish their register sets so people can write good free Linux drivers. I have programmed ARM, Blackfin, and PIC processors. In all cases the registers are exhaustively documented and there are thriving communities of experts trying to get the most out of them. Your $600 video card's drivers were probably developed by a team of 4. Is the code any good? You will never know. Thanks for nothing ATI and NVidia.

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
    1. Re:Hard to get excited by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are very good reasons Nvidia and ATI don't publish register sets for their latest cards. Due to their hardware complexity, all state of the art graphics chips are buggy, and the proprietary drivers contain the necessary code to work around these bugs. Neither company wants to document the existence of these workarounds to the other company.

    2. Re:Hard to get excited by voxel · · Score: 1

      ATI has 60 developers on the driver devleopment team. No idea how many Nvidia has, but I bet its even more.

      --
      Modesty is one of life's greatest attributes
    3. Re:Hard to get excited by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ATI has 60 developers on the driver devleopment team. ...and their drivers still suck ass. How pathetic.

  30. Confusion or stupidity by evilbessie · · Score: 1

    Um not to put too fine a point on it but I think the point was made that Nvidia *might* stop making the 7800 in which case it would be all alone at the top of the heap. In this situation which was described had you read the article was the point being made not at the moment, but perhaps shortly, as long as nvidia don't come up with something better in the mean time.

    just a thought, might have been a better idea to read closely.

  31. People with a job who do not sponge of the parents by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 1
    Geez, get this into your heads slashdot readers. Not everyone is a cashstrapped teenager. Also compared to such other hobbies as diving let alone sailing a top of the line PC is peanuts. I got a co-worker working on his boat and it is a cheap one. Only costing about as much a small mercedes. He spend his weekends in the summer sanding it and painting it. You would not believe what marine quality paint costs and how much goes on a small boat.

    Nah, PC is a cheap hobby. An uncle of mine used to collect model trains. They are just pieces of plastic with an electric motor yet cost as much as a top of the line GPU.

    Should I talk about people that follow their favorite soccer clubs to other countries? 12 hour drives just to sit on a plastic seat and back again? For that matter just a pair of concert tickets to a mainstream band. Thank god I don't like them because I am not plunking down the price of a mobo to stand among teenagers.

    Once you become an adult and get a real job you will realize that you will have money to burn (provided you don't get kids who will burn it for you) on your chosen hobby. For some that is gaming.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

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

  32. Except... by Ryan+Amos · · Score: 2, Insightful

    A pair of these ATI X1800s may cost less than a pair of 512MB GeForce GTXs, but nobody buys the 512 MB GTX for SLI, it's way too expensive. You can get 95% of the performance at 50% of the price by just buying a pair of 7800 GTs and using SLI. There is no game out there that a dual 7800 GT SLI system cannot run at any res, with full graphics turned on.

    If you read any of the enthusiast sites, they back the 2x7800 GT in SLI as the best top-end rig. It basically comes down to the fact that dual 7800 GTs are so fast, you gain no noticible performance benefit from using 7800 GTXs.

    1. Re:Except... by rune2 · · Score: 1
      It basically comes down to the fact that dual 7800 GTs are so fast, you gain no noticible performance benefit from using 7800 GTXs.


      I'm inclined to agree. For an extra $400 (Canadian) the extra 5% or so of performance you get with the 7800GTX just isn't worth it. I just bought myself two 7800GT's and I consider it one of the best price/performance values for SLI. If you look hard enough it's possible to find 7800GT cards that are cheaper than most 6800 Ultra cards!
    2. Re:Except... by Numen · · Score: 1

      There is no game out there that a dual 7800 GT SLI system cannot run at any res, with full graphics turned on.


      You don't play Everquest 2 do you?
    3. Re:Except... by Ryan+Amos · · Score: 1

      No. But nobody else does either.

  33. Almost makes me want to wish that one of them dies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And open-sources the driver as a last-ditch effort to remain competetive. :)

    Sigh, sorry God!

  34. Re:People with a job who do not sponge of the pare by Damvan · · Score: 1

    Amen Brotha!! So I have a good job, no kids, low mortgage, and I still get crap from my coworkers because I spent $500 on a video card. But no one blinks twice when a coworker spends that much for a cable for his winch on his 4wd, or the guy who spends that much on a Koi for his pond, or the girl who spent that much for 1 day of skiing. Nor the guy who spends three times that much per month for child care! PC gaming is relatively cheap hobby.

  35. pots and kettles by Xtifr · · Score: 1

    Given that ATI and NVidia are both on my "do not buy under any circumstances[*]" list, it seems like a case of measuring the non-reflectivity of pots and kettles to me! :)

    [*] Actually, there is a circumstance under which I'd consider them, but I refuse to hold my breath waiting for a full source-code release to either company's drivers or even a full spec release.

    1. Re:pots and kettles by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

      Well, nVidia seems to try, ATI doesn't seem to try very hard even on Windows.

      Thats about where I stand.

      --

      Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
  36. From the submission by obeythefist · · Score: 1

    Further, if the latest rumors about the 7800GTX 512MB are true, it would mean that this CrossFire graphics subsystem would arguably stand alone at the top of the graphics benchmarking mountain."

    So... if nVidia couldn't make/supply video cards (the rumour is that 7800GTX's are in short supply due to high demand), then ATI would have the fastest video cards...

    Freakin' genius rocket scientists we have doing article submissions around here.

    --
    I am government man, come from the government. The government has sent me. -- G.I.R.
  37. DIY by BeanBunny · · Score: 1