Keysplayr
Elite Member
- Jan 16, 2003
- 21,211
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Originally posted by: toslat
Originally posted by: keysplayr2003
Remember, ATI and Nvidia each have their features over the other. It is not one sided here. ATI has DX10.1 and Nvidia has onboard Physx. The 4870 has GDDR5, The GT200's have wider buses. Back and forth all day long. Exactly how valuable each of these features are will become known over the following year in the form of released titles that support one, the other, or both.
How is wider buses a feature? AFAIK its more of a cost vs memory bandwidth issue.
When the transformation from G80 to G92 took place, there was a HUGE amount of complaints from users stating they feel it was a step backwards. "Watered down" is what they called G92. When all G92 was intended for was to bring a similar amount of performance (maybe a little better) for less cost. A lot of people were thrilled with this, but many others were not.
All those who were not, wanted to see an increase of everything over a 8800GTX. Not a decrease. Enthusiasts wanted:
384-bit wide bus or greater, and more than 512MB of RAM, more shaders etc., on a single GPU. More of everything. Nvidia listened, and brought the GT200's. They listened and gave what users wanted. They didn't seem to care about the extra costs to purchase a card like this. Wider bus offers more bandwidth without having the memory clocked to the moon. In this case, GDDR3 is most likely cheaper than GDDR5.
Some people think a wider bus is a plus, and some, like yourself, might believe that faster more expensive memory on a thinner bus is the answer. Who is right? Debatable.