Reviews are up, [h] , Anandtech, and for the record Charlies numbers were up first, and correct.
The biggest thing [H] talks about from a quick glance is the "Awesome" Tesselation performance, however 60% faster, from a lot more die space for Tesselation than AMD from a 60% larger core seems not as impressive as it at first seems. As Charlie highlighted, the tesselation unit is scaleable on Nvidia, but only down, a smaller core will have less tesselating power while every chip AMD sells inthe 5 series has the same tesselator, meaning midrange and lower shader parts don't take a performance hit, nor do they lose performance when the shaders are doing other things, which is something Nvidia COULD certainly do, its very possible it will lose a huge amount of Tesselating speed in real gaming situations.
The good news is, Nvidia seem to think Tesselation is huge which means it should hopefully be in a LOT of games this year, and personally I think the IQ improvement it can(but won't always, good programming and design work is more important than the hardware) produce is fantastic.
The other good thing being if Tesselation kicks off big time, AMD can drop a bigger tesselator unit in, Nvidia would need to change their entire SP design to increase its power.
EDIT:_ I'll also happily admit the Architecture is a far bigger change than I thought, in some places good, in others not so good. They've stuck more in the Shader clusters, which improves speed of certain things, but they've also got an out of order items issue, which I think is somewhere they could really end up bottlenecked when doing the extra work of things like tesselation in real world with a lot of other data going in and out at the same time. But Nvidia have gone MASSIVE with the core, while taking a little bit of the AMD style of slightly different shaders added in to do different things design approach, but not to reduce size at all.
EDIT:- The bad news, for this launch Nvidia didnt' utter a word on clock speeds, power, cooling, yields, or much of anything useful it would seem. Which I gather from several reviewers is a pretty bad sign, Charlies info seems to be mainly from AIB's who would have that info and whose numbers tie in exactly with official info from Nvidia on the things they did release.
This might be a kick ass card(remember most AMD fans did say it would be faster), but if they could sell it as cheap as an AMD equivilent, wouldn't they tell us now so we could wait for March? If the 512sp part was going to be widely available and offer price/performance parity, or better, wouldn't they be shouting that from the rooftops.
I'm going to guess Charlie isn't very far wrong, a 448sp part the only thing really available, and it will cost significantly more and will probably be clocked quite a bit lower than the top end can't find it part. Which will mean significantly less tesselation power compared to a higher clocked 512sp part.
The really bad news, this "launch" tells no one a single thing about if Nvidia will offer a better buy than AMD come mid march, not even a tiny clue. A single card will only support 2 displays, the Fermi will need SLI to support 3 screens for surround gaming, which well, if they are cheap, won't be an issue, if they cost a bomb, makes it a useless feature to most of us
