Soldato
- Joined
- 20 Apr 2008
- Posts
- 3,832
- Location
- West Midlands
omg i knew you would show that one post lol
my point is why bash ati? nv have the same problems. i'm not sure what it was you were hoping to show from that
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omg i knew you would show that one post lol
Well i aint buying ATI again any time soon if they cant play some of the games nice and smoth, nvidia has a good thing with its physx/cuda thing going into games.
Yeah with these costing a lot(the new nvidia's), im hoping that gtx 285 ive got my eye on comes down in price.![]()
Intel and ATI are a lot more open source friendly with the release of info required to build OSS drivers. The open source ATI drivers will probably be better than any of the propriety options in a not so very distant future, especially when you're using a non standard OS.
Fair point, but OpenCL is already on Mac OS 10.6 and working - so hopefully we aught to be able to see some direct, task to task comparisons of how CUDA stacks up against OpenCL, which I for one will find interesting. But then I'm very, very strange like that![]()
On August 28, 2009, Apple released Mac OS X Snow Leopard, which contains a full implementation of OpenCL.[14] OpenCL in Snow Leopard will initially be supported on the ATI Radeon HD 4850, ATI Radeon HD 4870 and NVIDIA's Geforce 8600M GT, GeForce 8800 GS, GeForce 8800 GT, GeForce 8800 GTS, Geforce 9400M, GeForce 9600M GT, GeForce GT 120, GeForce GT 130, GeForce GTX 285, Quadro FX 4800, and Quadro FX 5600.
From wikipedia:
As OpenCL is an open standard, it should work on that hardware on any OS - what has your Macbook have in it, Intel chip?
I wouldn't be surprised if Nvidia and Ati consulted each other over release dates of products.....generates hype and sales for both company's & keeps the fanboy bashing alive.![]()
I was of the understanding that the current open drivers for ATI didn't support OpenGL/hardware 3d rendering? Or has that changed recently?
This is what people don't seem to realise... despite being proprietary CUDA and PhysX are well rounded, mature and stable products with decent documentation, etc., probably a good 2 years or more ahead of the competition... all you people sticking your nose up at them do is slow things down... admittedly an open standard would be better...
Back on the original topic I'm quite suprised at this development as the last I heard December was very much a "paper" launch... guess the 5800 launch forced them to take more agressive action...
GEFORCE 191.03 BETAHeres a good place to start
http://forum.needforspeed.com/eaforum/posts/list/304149.page