Nvidia GeForce GTX 760 Review Roundup
An anonymous reader writes "Earlier today, Nvidia released its latest graphics card: the Geforce GTX 760. A followup to last month's GTX 770 launch, the new GTX 760 is the fourth 700-series card since the company launched the GTX Titan back in February. Sporting 1,152 CUDA cores, 96 TMUs, 32 ROPS, a 256-bit memory interface that effectively runs at 6 GHz, a base clock of 980 MHz, and a Boost speed of up to 1,033 MHz, the newly-minted GTX 760 is offered at a price point of $250. Benchmark results are available from all the usual suspects: AnandTech, HotHardware, PC Magazine, PCPer, and Tom's Hardware. To make a long story short, Nvidia's new card edges out AMD's equally-priced Radeon HD 7950 Boost Edition, and even goes toe-to-toe with the $300 Radeon HD 7870 GHz Edition. Factoring out AMD's incredible Never Settle game bundles, and looking purely at performance, the GTX 670 allows Nvidia to cinch up the mainstream gaming price point."
Reader crookedvulture adds,
"The $250 card is an updated spin on an existing GPU, so it doesn't raise the bar dramatically. In fact, the GTX 760 achieves rough performance parity with the Radeon HD 7950 Boost, which costs just a little bit more. The situation is similar at around $400, where the contest between the GeForce GTX 770 and Radeon HD 7970 GHz Edition is a toss-up overall. These price/performance scatter plots paint the picture clearly. AMD has largely resolved its previous frame latency issues with new drivers, making the battle between GeForce and Radeon more about extras than performance. Nvidia offers software to optimize game settings and record gameplay sessions, while AMD includes download codes for recent games. You really can't go wrong either way."
It's the GeForce GTX 670 for a hundred bucks cheaper. That's what all the reviews boil down to.
Nvidia offers software to optimize game settings and record gameplay sessions
Did anyone else read that and think, "this does not belong in a device driver"?
Maybe it's a great idea that many people will use and there is no other possible way to accomplish this task in userspace. I'm open to that idea, but right now I just don't see the merit.
It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
In my own humble previous experience...ATI drivers on linux are less than great.
Nvidia FTW.
Unless ATI is seriously reconsidering its position on Linux drivers, I would go blindly for an NVIDIA
My Geforce 220 is 10 times faster than a HD5970 (used to mine bitcoins on it) with all of the games (LoL, D3, TF2 etc.)
The world as we know it might not even exist without Alan Turing. His contributions went well beyond computer science.
Yeah. Because no one else has ever done cross discipline work. You're just a fucking troll.
So I'm not impressed with ATI/AMD's offerings at all anymore.
Before you bring out the "must be a user problem" nonsense: I never install a new GPU without doing a clean installation of Windows first, and I never try just one version of the drivers. Despite my experimentation ATI/AMD always has various issues that range from painful to annoying to deal with. NVidia always has exactly zero problems.
YMMV I guess, but I chuckle every time I see ATI/AMD fanboys claim the drivers are fine and it must be a user problem. That's like defending Windows 8. I'd be a pretty crappy driver if the next car I bought put the steering wheel on the floor and the gas pedal on the driver's side door.
Such a feature was needed anyway and already exists. It's also the stuff behind the "Geforce GRID" (racked servers with GPUs that stream 3D accelerated software, like CAD, GIS, visualization or games to multiple thin clients, compatible with desktop virtualization, with choice between a "geforce" or "quadro" software configuration for each user)
Kepler GPUs include a H264 encoder used for that streaming purpose. Dumping to disk is a simple and interesting option, which I hadn't thought about but is obviously useful as well.
Laced with broad strokes of bs like any other zealot they come out in droves to defend their brand. Nvidia CUDA is a dead end future. The LLVM/Clang driver Target for the R600/future AMD set up will make AMD Radeon/FirePro solutions on Linux/FreeBSD rock solid in the next 6 months. Nvidia continues to ignore reality: OpenGL/OpenCL are married together. APU designs are the future and having a crappy OpenCL presence far behind AMD is the reason Apple dumped Nvidia from now on.
As if Apple won't go back to NVidia when they have a more competitive offering. They have been switching back and forth several times since the radeon 7000 was a hot video chip.
I was promised a flying car. Where is my flying car?
There's too much Nvidia love in this thread.
Just installed a 7850; it rules, and for 180 bucks I got it and 3 games. The fan casing was a quarter inch too long for my case before I took tin snips to it.
I'll keep buying AMD if only to promote competition in my favorite market.