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ATI Releases Five New Radeons

An anonymous reader writes "Eager to retake the performance crown from NVIDIA, ATI has announced five new releases for their Radeon product line. The latest card features 512MB GDDR4 memory running at 1000Mhz, it's currently the fastest single CPU VGA card out there. From the review: 'ATI has proven they are a leader and not a follower with the X1950 XTX. ATI has released the world's first consumer 3D graphics card with GDDR4 memory clocked at the highest ever stock speed that chews through games when it comes to high definition gaming. Memory bandwidth looks to once again be the defining factor in 3D performance. With a re-designed heatsink/fan unit, faster memory, and lowered price, the ATI Radeon X1950 XTX and CrossFire Edition are both serious 3D gaming video cards for the [H]ardcore that offer some value over NVIDIA's more expensive 7950 GX2. ATI's CrossFire dual GPU gaming platform looks to have just grown up.'"

6 of 268 comments (clear)

  1. Screw ATI by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    What I want to know is where can I get the world's fastest accelerated EGA graphics card? I want to play Kings Quest II.

  2. Drivers? by Recovering+Hater · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I just can't help but wonder what their Linux driver support will be like. If it is the same or worse then honestly, it only means that ATI has produced five more cards to ignore. Harsh? Maybe, but there is some truth in that statement.

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  3. ATI/AMD - Show leadership by peterdaly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    These cards are nice...for windows users.

    What the new AMD led ATI can do to help show leadership is to release the information (or even drivers) needed for Linux to take full advantage of their card capabilities.

    ATI seemed to not want to do this. I hope this changes under the new AMD administration.

    What I've heard in the Linux community is to stay away from anything ATI if you plan to use it with Linux. Too bad really, because they really do make nice cards.

    1. Re:ATI/AMD - Show leadership by Whiney+Mac+Fanboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, said - but to expand on that a little:

      What I've heard in the Linux community is to stay away from anything ATI if you plan to use it with Linux.

      The same applies to nvidia. Try Intel or Unichrome cards. Support companies that support FOSS.

      Oh, and for the people who'll inevitably reply with the "they cant release the source, because of 3rd party IP" (I am tired of that particular whine) - why can't ATI/Nvidia release the source for the code they do have IP rights over? (and allow the OSS community to fill in the blanks).

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  4. Wait for DirectX10 cards? by Brit_in_the_USA · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is generally predicted that DirectX 10 cards will be with us in a few months (holiday season or just after).

    Are sales declining because of anticipation of this?
    Will ATI and Nvidia be able to shift large quantities of cards over the next few months, with people like myself waiting for the next (significant) generation?

    Aside: Yes, I am aware that these cards will still pack a punch in DirectX10 games, and will not be obsolete over night, but the unified shader/vertex architecture of DirectX10 seems to be a big shift in card design and will offer a lot of features to game desingers, not efficntly do-able on the odler hardware, so you may be stuck with a less good lookign rendering of a new game.

  5. Re:Graphics card naming... by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 5, Informative

    They model numbers. The requirement is that they be different between different cards, so customers can see that different products are different. Beyond that, marketting can do whatever they want with them - it doesn't really matter.

    Suprisingly, the marketting departments at ATI and Nvidia have settled on a highly structured and informative system for model numbers (for something generated by marketting departments).

    Here's how it works: Take the "X1950 XTX". That splits into 4 segments: "X1" is the generation, "9" is the class, "50" is the revision, and "XTX" is the specific model. Nvidia uses exactly the same system. For the 7950 GX2, we have generation 7, class 9, specific model GX2.

    Generation usually changes yearly. Class splits into (generally): 0-3 is low-end, 5-7 is mid-range, and 8-9 is high end. The revision number allows more recent products to have higher numbers than older products. Generally for ATI "Pro" Now - that still doesn't let you determine which card is "better" based on the model number, but model numbers never do that. Which is better, An "AMD Opteron 165" or an "AMD Athlon64 FX-50"?

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