Caporegime
- Joined
- 18 Oct 2002
- Posts
- 31,192
Bhavv, cut out the inflamitory crap or risk a suspension. Keep it civil
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Nope nope nope.
very bad example.
Nintendo own the platform.
MS owns some games companies.
NV does not own the PC platform or own any games companies nether are they games publishers.
Since console manufacturers make most of their money from licensing development kits and rights to games studios and publishers it seems any funding the console manufacturers do give to development came from the developer's own pockets in the first place. In short: keh?
Quote:
Originally Posted by James J View Post
Even so, they couldnt slash them to the point of making the speed increases in games, physicsx and the sound options all on 1 card when its similar in price lol. The power issues are offset by good PSU's so those are a none issue to be fair, the temperatures CAN be solved by more efficient cooling which has been proved in the past with a plephora of cards
Forgive me for this being my first post, but I see it like this.
I seem to remember that when the 4870 512 was released its comparative nvidia offering was the gtx260. the 4870 512 was slightly faster and cheaper.
This caused nvidia to respond with the gtx260 216. the 4870 lost slghtly in performance but will always be remember for its value for money although not as much as the 4850. Either way compared to a gtx280, the 4870 was a fine offering for its price/performance. didnt stop it from selling .
470/480 FUTURE Tessellation capabilities if gaming developers use it.
470/480 whilst impressive is just too much for the 40nm process.
similar problems like the 1st amd phenom on 65nm.
With a 2nd revision to maybe 32nm then it can then maybe open up to 16 SMs support, and hopefully will cut the tdp down too
I'm not knocking the architecture of the gf100 it's good, but only if it gets used to its potential. which means future game developers use tessellation etc.
At the moment no matter what heatsink,fan design, improvements you carry out, you cannot simply hide the fact that there is a both an engineering design fault and low success rate with the size of the 500mm2+ die in relation to the tsmc 40 nm process. Ati have been struggling with low yield rates as you well know but the die size is in ati's favour.
and secondly you are forgetting that ati were just about able to make a single slot dual gpu card on the 40nm process, Hence then 5970 even though they were reluctant to make it and did so on scaled down freq's etc. I'd like to see a dual gpu card from nvidia on the current fabrication process.
Of course there will be alternatives cheaper crossfire and sli configs in the future.
If you can agree that in its current form, its too power hungry in full load operation, (despite it may still remain reliable at (90 degrees+ temps).
in comparsion to the ati 5850 5870.
Ok yes it does provide a good performance in gaming,
But that there is more potential in the architecture than can be seen right now, and that it can provide gains in future games by implementing tessellation, but requires a revision to a more suitable process fabrication.
and then theres the main decider the price ! Thats for the buyer to decide, for me its too expensive, but then i feel a 5850 is too expensive too.
I'm not a fanboy, I buy what i feel is the best for the money at the time.
My 4870 although getting on a bit will last me til the next developent of either rv970 or fermi II. I'll skip both ati and nvidia for now. and anyway summers coming up soon.
Last edited by Davedree; 28th Mar 2010 at 07:16.
oh yeah sony's gaming division lost 2 billion because they didnt licence enough kits? no they lost that money because ps3 sells like crap and the wii is killing the competition in terms of sales. so no console manufactures do not make most of their money that way so your post is flawed.
Since the introduction of the PlayStation 3 in late 2006, Sony has subsidized the price of every console sold, a deficit the company has made up for with game sales and royalties.
PlayStation-specific numbers remained static, however, with the strengthening of the PS3 business offset by losses in both the PS2 and PSP operations.
in a way that youtube would frown upon.
nope nope what? thats thats why i said they fund developers way more. they even own ips and pc hardware developers need to take note of that, they advertise all the games even if they dont own them, they spend millions in press conferences showing games that again they dont own because in the end people will buy their consoles to play them. intel made the first step with project offset by purchasing the ip. while sony, ms and nintendo pay tens of millions for a bit of exclusive content or for a title to be timed exclusive for a couple of months nvidia, amd and intel only go as far as helping to implement a few pointless features.
people already start to realise that there is no point buying new hardware when there is no game to take advantage of it so how about nvidia stops with their physx crap and ati shove their "open" bs up theirs and do something more meaningfull? like funding cutting edge pc exclusives that will make people buy their gpus in order to play them?
nvidia owns the gpu that you bought in order to play games. am i talking to a brick wall?
Well i can understand where you are coming form but personally if it was me id not look at the 5850 unless crossfiring, id look at the 5870 which is a faster card than the 470 at that res period. but if you are really that put off not much people say can change that though id suggest you bare in mind that the 5770 is a 4 series single gpu card with dx11 bolted on essentially, no amount of driver updates will make it a fast card by today's high end standards, just a shame your experience panned the way it did!
Id say realisticly, bye a 5870, try it for a couple of days and if you don't like it return it under the distance selling act, no harm no foul and if you do find it surprises your expectations then by all the knowledge and news going at the minute you have a better card, but its down to you i suppose just thought id advise.
I play wow & COD5 and crysis at 1920x1080 .. the 5770 holds up ok ... also use video/effects editing and CAD software
I have an i7 920 D0 @4.2ghz with 3x2GB tri channel Corsair sticks
It was a new build with the 5770 a few months back as I wanted to keep the cost down .. seeing as it's giving me monster grief I'm now prepared to discard it for an upgrade and I'm not happy buying another ati atm so It looks like a 470 for me.
All the 58xx are basically juiced up 4xxx series cards architecturally speaking.
Forgive me for this being my first post, but I see it like this.
I seem to remember that when the 4870 512 was released its comparative nvidia offering was the gtx260. the 4870 512 was slightly faster and cheaper.
This caused nvidia to respond with the gtx260 216. the 4870 lost slghtly in performance but will always be remember for its value for money although not as much as the 4850. Either way compared to a gtx280, the 4870 was a fine offering for its price/performance. didnt stop it from selling .
470/480 FUTURE Tessellation capabilities if gaming developers use it.
470/480 whilst impressive is just too much for the 40nm process.
similar problems like the 1st amd phenom on 65nm.
With a 2nd revision to maybe 32nm then it can then maybe open up to 16 SMs support, and hopefully will cut the tdp down too
I'm not knocking the architecture of the gf100 it's good, but only if it gets used to its potential. which means future game developers use tessellation etc.
At the moment no matter what heatsink,fan design, improvements you carry out, you cannot simply hide the fact that there is a both an engineering design fault and low success rate with the size of the 500mm2+ die in relation to the tsmc 40 nm process. Ati have been struggling with low yield rates as you well know but the die size is in ati's favour.
and secondly you are forgetting that ati were just about able to make a single slot dual gpu card on the 40nm process, Hence then 5970 even though they were reluctant to make it and did so on scaled down freq's etc. I'd like to see a dual gpu card from nvidia on the current fabrication process.
Of course there will be alternatives cheaper crossfire and sli configs in the future.
If you can agree that in its current form, its too power hungry in full load operation, (despite it may still remain reliable at (90 degrees+ temps).
in comparsion to the ati 5850 5870.
Ok yes it does provide a good performance in gaming,
But that there is more potential in the architecture than can be seen right now, and that it can provide gains in future games by implementing tessellation, but requires a revision to a more suitable process fabrication.
and then theres the main decider the price ! Thats for the buyer to decide, for me its too expensive, but then i feel a 5850 is too expensive too.
I'm not a fanboy, I buy what i feel is the best for the money at the time.
My 4870 although getting on a bit will last me til the next developent of either rv970 or fermi II. I'll skip both ati and nvidia for now. and anyway summers coming up soon.
People over estimated the 5770, what resr do you game at may i ask and what is the rest of your rig, games you play?