bryanW1995
Lifer
- May 22, 2007
- 11,144
- 32
- 91
No, Online retailers are gouging. MSRP for the 580 is 499.00.
Newegg is mega gouging.
hopefully they're gouging b/c they think they can rather than b/c the cards are limited availability.
No, Online retailers are gouging. MSRP for the 580 is 499.00.
Newegg is mega gouging.
http://www.hardwarecanucks.com/foru...ws/37789-nvidia-geforce-gtx-580-review-8.html
1150MHz core speed with voltage tweak? Can't wait for that review...
@MentalIlness
the 580 either scales horribly in SLI (with current drivers) or its CPU bottlenecked.
That might change in the future with new cpus comeing out, and with nvidia haveing time to work on SLI drivers.
Really you think every rumor springs from truth ? You sure were fast to jump on the rumor that nv's price cuts were not permanent really fast. You set that record straight right quick. Guess it's only the rumor you prefer to be true that have that basis of some truth.
Can you field a question to nv for us ? Ask them why they've named a GTX 480 refresh as a brand new series ? The 580 is just the 512SP 480 we've been hearing of for months now. Why the weird naming ? Have you got your free pair of GTX 580s from nvidia yet ? Or did they not bother with the focus group process for this launch as the card is really just a refresh not a new series as it's name denotes.
Perhaps in your capacity as a mod you can lock the umpteen 580 threads and create the stickied 580 review thread for us all as we saw with the 6870/6850 launch. Thanks.
Yes the 6970 sure is looking to be an exciting launch when it comes out this month. Brand new architecture. Fastest single-gpu. Big improvements in crossfire scaling that will make it the multiple-card champ as well. Then there is the 6990 in December to look forward to.
Give me a break. This isn't AMD Zone here.
If 20% performance improvement, lower power usage, cooler temps, and quieter operation is just a "refresh" then I want EVERY product to get refreshes all the time.
The fanboy comments on the forum here are getting rediculous. The 580 will only get better with driver updates, and it's already within spitting distance of the 5970. I seem to remember when we said a new card at the speed of the last gen's 2xGPU was a GOOD thing. Sure it's not perfect, but its a definite improvement over the 480.
Its naive and foolish to compare this to a 280->285 refresh.
On 11/9/10, you could go as far to say the 580 is a good GPU.
As soon as the 6970 is here, I believe everyone will look back and see how marginal of an improvement the card really was. It's hard for reviewers to deny the state of affairs today, but I'm sure they are all sitting there with a 6970 with a smirk.
It's a small step for Nvidia.. but they are playing catchup on thermals, still not there yet. It had to be released now, so it got some glory days and sales to at least the NV diehards. There's no point in trying to release it after the 6970s..
So.... next question, is FUD right about a dual gpu card version of these? It looks like a downclocked, lower voltage dual 580 gpu would actually work unlike dual 480's.
The reviews i've checked, I haven't seen TRI SLI either.
So did anyone read the [ H ] review?
What struck me was how well the 5870 2GB held up against the 480. It also basically tied the 580 in F1 2010 (lost by 1.2 FPS avg at 25x16 8X TR MSAA).
The 580 is a very nice card, but I've come to the conclusion that due to the architectural differences, (scalar vs vec5 or 4) no similar generation card will win every bench.
no need to get hostile on him groove. also, you know he's not a video mod. I already pm'd idc and bfg to ask them to sticky the review thread, I'm sure I'm not the only one.
@Russian, i was aware AMD used to driver hack and throttle in Furmark (and coped a "shellacking", well deserved). I wasn't aware they still did it. Do they?? Cos my CF 5850s heats up nicely in Furmark well above any gaming scenario.
Silly/obvious question, but do those Furmark throttles affect framerates?
If Cayman isnt at least 30% faster it will be a failure
Cayman on the other hand should be a full refresh, not just a "tweaked" 5870, so personally I am expecting ~50% more performance, specially in DX11
You embarress yourself by posting that. Not that most folks don't write off your posts immediately anyways. You made endless threads ranting about 460 SLI being the second coming. Not that any forum goers here will be surprised by this considering it is nv.
I noticed that. I pretty much only read H's reviews and a random selection of other sites on launch. H is the best, most unbiased site out there IMO.
50% faster than HD5870 or 50% faster than GTX580? Considering GTX480 is ~ 20% faster than Hd5870 and GTX580 is another 15-20% faster, GTX580 is about 35-40% faster than the HD5870. So you think HD6970 should be between 85-90% faster than HD5870 on the same 40nm process? That's not realistic. 50% faster than HD5870 is possible though.
And btw, looking at the computerbase ratings (I love that they do this, spares us the trouble), the 580 is actually 25 to 30% faster, except at 2560x1600 where it takes off because of 1.5GB memory, obviously
1) The only review on the Internet where HD5870 is only 2.2 fps slower than GTX480 in Civilization 5.
2) The only review on the Internet where HD5870 is only 1.4 fps slower than GTX480 in Metro 2033.
3) The only review website on the Internet that thinks MLAA > MSAA by deriving their conclusion after testing it in 1 game.
4) The only review on the Internet that chooses to use Medal of Honor console port where GTX285 is only 2 fps slower than HD5870 and F1 2010 instead of more demanding games like AvP, STALKER:CoP, Lost Planet 2, Arma 2, etc when testing $300+ modern graphics cards.
Yes definitely, the best review website.
This is what happens when a review actually includes demanding games instead of Medal of Honor and F1 (HardOCP) or Call of Juarez 2, Dawn of War 2, Unreal Tournament 3 (TPU). Computerbase arrives at GTX480 and GTX580 as 36% and 58% faster, respectively, than the HD5870 at 2560x1600 8AA. I am sure Kyle Benett doesn't agree with that review. Computerbase shows DX9 vs. DX10 vs. DX11 performance averages too.
It is an amazing product.. but how is it not a refresh akin to the 280 > 285?
The only difference was that the 480 had many more issues than the 280 that needed refreshing.
What we have is a chip that took the 480, enabled all of the cores and increased the clocks while correcting power issues. It seems to fit the definition of refresh to me, and is very similar to the jumps we used to see in the 7800 to 7900 days.
I suppose this is both a refresh and a repair at the same time, as it corrected faults while increasing clocks and whatnot. But the feeling that this is "more than a refresh" is merely reflective of how many issues bothered us with the 480, and how mundane refreshes have been the last couple of generations (generally only targeting a shrink to reduce power and increase clocks and not increase the shading power like this).