firewolfsm
Golden Member
- Oct 16, 2005
- 1,848
- 29
- 91
The InsideHW review seemed quite biased in ATI's favor.Originally posted by: thilan29
From the fpslabs review Crysis at 1600x1200 High settings gets 21fps while in the InsideHW review it gets 37fps at the same settings...I wonder what the discrepancy is due to. InsideHW uses the 8.1 drivers and in the games they tested, there's a fairly decent advantage over the single 3870. Hopefully those kind of results translate into all games and not just the optimized ones.
Same here. I think the 3870 X2 is important to ATi because it allows them to briefly claim the "single card" performance crown but I'll be staying away from it because I don?t think it?s a robust long term solution.I want a high end card really badly at this point but have no interest in anything operating on Crossfire or SLI.
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Same here. I think the 3870 X2 is important to ATi because it allows them to briefly claim the "single card" performance crown but I'll be staying away from it because I don?t think it?s a robust long term solution.I want a high end card really badly at this point but have no interest in anything operating on Crossfire or SLI.
Originally posted by: WaTaGuMp
I am looking to upgrade from my GTX and I still dont think this card is the answer.
Originally posted by: CP5670
It only takes up two slots, just as a typical single card would. Then again, it certainly consumes the power that a dual-card setup would, and it definitely makes enough noise and produces enough heat to fool people into thinking it?s really two cards.
They forgot the most important thing, the fact that it has all the game compatibility issues of two cards.
I want a high end card really badly at this point but have no interest in anything operating on Crossfire or SLI. At least it's good to hear that R700 might not be as far off as we thought. If nothing else, it might spur Nvidia into action again.
Originally posted by: Sylvanas
Originally posted by: CP5670
It only takes up two slots, just as a typical single card would. Then again, it certainly consumes the power that a dual-card setup would, and it definitely makes enough noise and produces enough heat to fool people into thinking it?s really two cards.
They forgot the most important thing, the fact that it has all the game compatibility issues of two cards.
I want a high end card really badly at this point but have no interest in anything operating on Crossfire or SLI. At least it's good to hear that R700 might not be as far off as we thought. If nothing else, it might spur Nvidia into action again.
I recently got a Crossfire setup and despite the doom and gloom that goes on in these forums about multi-GPU and how theres always 'problems' and 'issues'- I have experienced none and have played all the recent latest and older games on this setup including: Crysis, Stalker, HL2, cnc3 UT3, BF2, Civ4, Tribes and even older games like Emperor just to name a few. Most of the time when 'issues' arise its because people haven't diagnosed the problems correctly and are too quickly to blame it on 'oh it must be 'Crossfire/SLI/Vista' I would say if you want a High end card and if the X2 has the performance theres no reason not to go for it.
I disagree with the assertion that SLI and CF are in their infancy. SLI is approaching 4 years old and CF is right behind that. Both companies have been through numerous hardware revisions (NV40, G70, G80, G90; R400, R500, R600) in the time to allow themselves to optimize things on the hardware side. And you know what? The implementation still sucks.Originally posted by: Demoth
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Same here. I think the 3870 X2 is important to ATi because it allows them to briefly claim the "single card" performance crown but I'll be staying away from it because I don?t think it?s a robust long term solution.I want a high end card really badly at this point but have no interest in anything operating on Crossfire or SLI.
The 3870 X2 is more then an attempt for a brief performance lead. This card is a natural start to ATI's ultimate goal of a single GPU design with higher end cards having multiple GPUs added. Going this route will ultimately lead to ATI"s manufacturers being able to quickly and cheaply mass produce any iteration of a generation that is in demand.
Multi-core CPUs, for most end users, is only applicable in a few applications and will be game limited for quite a while. Adding GPUs however translates to a theoretical linear increase in performance, limited as of now by Crossfire/SLI being in it's infancy and a few hardware design refinements.
If these reviews show nothing else, it shows ATI is well ahead of Nvidia when it comes to Crossfire.
This first round of cards though I would avoid. Way too much noise and still a high power draw. With some refinement and newer drivers, this card could signal the start of a power shift.
Originally posted by: ViRGE
I disagree with the assertion that SLI and CF are in their infancy. SLI is approaching 4 years old and CF is right behind that. Both companies have been through numerous hardware revisions (NV40, G70, G80, G90; R400, R500, R600) in the time to allow themselves to optimize things on the hardware side. And you know what? The implementation still sucks.Originally posted by: Demoth
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Same here. I think the 3870 X2 is important to ATi because it allows them to briefly claim the "single card" performance crown but I'll be staying away from it because I don?t think it?s a robust long term solution.I want a high end card really badly at this point but have no interest in anything operating on Crossfire or SLI.
The 3870 X2 is more then an attempt for a brief performance lead. This card is a natural start to ATI's ultimate goal of a single GPU design with higher end cards having multiple GPUs added. Going this route will ultimately lead to ATI"s manufacturers being able to quickly and cheaply mass produce any iteration of a generation that is in demand.
Multi-core CPUs, for most end users, is only applicable in a few applications and will be game limited for quite a while. Adding GPUs however translates to a theoretical linear increase in performance, limited as of now by Crossfire/SLI being in it's infancy and a few hardware design refinements.
If these reviews show nothing else, it shows ATI is well ahead of Nvidia when it comes to Crossfire.
This first round of cards though I would avoid. Way too much noise and still a high power draw. With some refinement and newer drivers, this card could signal the start of a power shift.
It still requires custom profiles, it still varies in performance wildly from game to game. When you add more rendering hardware to a single die you can get returns very close to the theoretical maximum, but this doesn't happen with SLI/CF. Graphical rendering may be embarrassingly parallel but it doesn't scale very well with multiple dice because it can't; there's a massive penalty involved because we don't have cache coherency for data and because otherwise sharing data among GPUs is a very slow process due to the inability to use the kind of fast buses and memory crossbars that GPUs use to access their own memory. Hell, each die needs its own copy of the data. At the end of the day the introduction of pixel shaders is severely impacting the performance of this technology.
So no, this isn't a technology in its infancy, it's just really, really subpar technology. What You See Is What You Get, and what you get is a technology that has to constantly be coddled to perform well. Multiple GPU technology is a gimmick to sell more GPUs, and until the day comes that it's possible to use multiple GPUs without profiles and other game-specific adaptations, it's not a viable way to increase performance across the board.
Originally posted by: tuteja1986
ATI finally beat a G80 for ultimate performance crown after 1 and half year sad really :!
Anyways now they just need to sell it at $450 and it will be a good seller.
Originally posted by: Puffnstuff
I'll hang on to my 8800gts 512 which has consistant performance. Thanks for the links.
Originally posted by: taltamir
I have seen a review showing the x2 having huge benefits from PCIe v2...
The P35 chipset doesn't support PCIe v2 does it?
Originally posted by: taltamir
I have seen a review showing the x2 having huge benefits from PCIe v2...
The P35 chipset doesn't support PCIe v2 does it?