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Rroff said:I just don't see nVidia releasing an "8600" card - as performance wise it would essentially be a 7900GTX + DX10, kinda pointless - more likely new high end cards will come out to supercede the current 8800 cards and then either the GTS or GTX will be sold at mid-range prices...
Rroff said:I just don't see nVidia releasing an "8600" card - as performance wise it would essentially be a 7900GTX + DX10, kinda pointless - more likely new high end cards will come out to supercede the current 8800 cards and then either the GTS or GTX will be sold at mid-range prices...
Originally posted by Rroff
rather than something that is essentially a 7900 card + DX10
Rroff said:Kinda ironic from a guy called loadsamoneyI get your point - but its arbitrary to my point... not that nVidia won't have a mid and low range DX10, infact their road maps has the nVidia G83 and nVidia G82 as replacements for the 7600 and 7300, which I'm guessing would be "8600" and "8200" cards... but that by the time they are out, the 8800 performance is going to be dropping towards the mid-range mark - it would make more sense for them to then market the GTS at mid range prices, rather than something that is essentially a 7900 card + DX10 (which is what a 8600 would be in comparison to an 8800GTS) - which would be pretty useless as actually using the DX10 features would probably cause it to run fairly slowly... possibly such a configuration might work for a low end DX10 card...