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AMD Launches Radeon R9 380X, Fastest GPU Under $250 (hothardware.com)

MojoKid writes: Although AMD's mid-range GPU line-up has been relatively strong for a while now, the company is launching the new Radeon R9 380X today with the goal of taking down competing graphics cards like NVIDIA's popular GeForce GTX 960. The Radeon R9 380X has a fully-functional AMD Tonga GPU with all 32 compute units / 2048 shader processors enabled. AMD's reference specifications call for 970MHz+ engine clock with 4GB of 1425MHz GDDR5 memory (5.7 Gbps effective). Typical board power is 190W and cards require a pair of supplemental 6-pin power feeds. The vast majority of the Radeon R9 380X cards that will hit the market, however, will likely be custom models that are factory overlcocked and look nothing like AMD's reference design. The Radeon R9 380X, or more specifically the factory overclocked Sapphire Nitro R9 380X tested, performed significantly better than AMD's Radeon R9 285 or NVIDIA's GeForce GTX 960 across the board. The 380X, however, could not catch more powerful and more expensive cards like the GeForce GTX 970. Regardless, the Radeon R9 380X is easily the fastest graphics card on the market right now, under $250.

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  1. Re:Talk about drawing a fine line... by Ramze · · Score: 5, Insightful

    2560 x 1440 is not "low resolution" regardless of how many thousands of dollars you spent 8 years ago on the tech. Age is irrelevant. MacBook Gen 3 13" Retina Displays are 2560 x 1440. Those are being sold THIS YEAR as high-end displays.

    Blu Ray is 1920 x 1080
    4K is 3840 x 2160, but 4K has not made it out the showroom yet for TV or most monitors.

    IBM came out with some spiffy T220/T221 LCD monitors that you could buy way back in 2003 for about $8,500 each that had 3840 x 2400, but that doesn't mean that 3840 x 2400 is "outdated low resolution" simply because one could buy it 12 years ago.