It's too much of a specialised market. The only way it keeps 2 companies going is by the cards being expensive. The only way it would be worth anyone's time would be to produce on-board GPUs and get companies like Dell to use them in their PCs
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I saw a joke once, it went something like this: 'I'm testing out Battlefield 3 on intel's new graphics chip and do you know, it looks exactly the same as it does on AMD and Nvidia chips!' Other guy says 'What's the FPS?' First guy says 'Dunno, second frame hasn't appeared yet'.
No I just follow them very closely due to investments and being one of the few remaining old school PowerVR fanboys.@Pottsey, are you like PowerVR's PR man or something?
one of the few remaining old school PowerVR fanboys.
No I just follow them very closely due to investments and being one of the few remaining old school PowerVR fanboys.
I expect the desktop card will not do very well at first only really being used for professional work not games. Everything I have seen says the 2nd gen ray tracing card, the one due this year is not a gaming card. But that was before PowerVR said the card was changed to a GPGPU and PowerVR's GPGPU has DX10/11 support. So who knows? The most likely thing is the GPGPU is underpowered for games and at around mobile phone level graphics or just above but massively beats AMD and Nvidia at ray tracing.Doc, you gotta tell me how it ends!
http://vr-zone.com/articles/revenge...gpu-pcie-card-coming-later-in-2012/14609.html