Vargas PrimeKing of NothingJust a ShowRegistered Userregular
edited October 2007
So how long are we going to have to wait until this card is selling for around $200, like Anandtech said it would? Everywhere I'm seeing it pop up, it's hovering around $300.
So how long are we going to have to wait until this card is selling for around $200, like Anandtech said it would? Everywhere I'm seeing it pop up, it's hovering around $300.
I believe the $200 card will be the 256MB version. Right now manufacturers are taking advantage of consumers a bit.
So how long are we going to have to wait until this card is selling for around $200, like Anandtech said it would? Everywhere I'm seeing it pop up, it's hovering around $300.
I believe the $200 card will be the 256MB version. Right now manufacturers are taking advantage of consumers a bit.
So wait, is the 256MB version the one that everyone's getting all hyped about? Or are the tech comparisons being done using a 512MB card? Will the 256MB card be performing that well?
Forgive my tech-dumbery... I'm just trying to figure out if the 512 version is worth the extra cost, or if I should wait.
All the coverage is on the 512MB cards. In fact, those are the only ones that are out right now.
victor_c26 on
It's been so long since I've posted here, I've removed my signature since most of what I had here were broken links. Shows over, you can carry on to the next post.
Looks like most of the other cards in their line have dropped in price due to the gt coming out, and I assume a refresh on the gtx/ultra sometime soon.
I went to BFG yesterday and I couldn't find mention of an 8800GT, only the 8600GT and the 8800GTS/GTX.
Edit: I just went there again; that splash thingie wasn't on the front page. I must have looked before the embargo lifted.
Edit: NOoooooooooooooooo. They have a BFG store which doesn't ship outside the US. FARK.
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HenroidMexican kicked from Immigration ThreadCentrism is Racism :3Registered Userregular
edited November 2007
A quick comment about the graphs on page 5.
2560x1600 is a fucking huge resolution to test at (the FPS being steady at above 30 shows some power). I can't imagine many people run programs at that setting, but I have a feeling I'm going to be proven wrong.
2560x1600 is a fucking huge resolution to test at (the FPS being steady at above 30 shows some power). I can't imagine many people run programs at that setting, but I have a feeling I'm going to be proven wrong.
Statement: E-peen beacon unlocked and primed. Prepare for inbound e-peen demonstrations in 5... 4...
I just installed my evga superclocked version, first thing that sprang to mind immediately was "holy shit this thing is about 1/5 as noisy as my BFG 7900GT was, wooo!"
Sorry if this has already been discussed, but if I'm building a new computer and including an 8800gt, would I need a mobo with a PCI 2.0 slot to fully optimize the 8800gt?
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ShogunHair long; money long; me and broke wizards we don't get alongRegistered Userregular
Sorry if this has already been discussed, but if I'm building a new computer and including an 8800gt, would I need a mobo with a PCI 2.0 slot to fully optimize the 8800gt?
Sorry if this has already been discussed, but if I'm building a new computer and including an 8800gt, would I need a mobo with a PCI 2.0 slot to fully optimize the 8800gt?
No sir.
At this point, you wouldn't even see a performance boost.
I don't even know if PCIe 2.0 motherboards are out yet. Are they?
Sorry if this has already been discussed, but if I'm building a new computer and including an 8800gt, would I need a mobo with a PCI 2.0 slot to fully optimize the 8800gt?
No sir.
At this point, you wouldn't even see a performance boost.
I don't even know if PCIe 2.0 motherboards are out yet. Are they?
IIRC some P35 chipsets with DDR3 support also do PCIe2 support. The thing is current cards are still not using all the available bandwidth of PCIe1.1 or whatever is the current iteration. Or at least that's what I read.
I have a amd 64 2.7+ and a X800 GT (I think), I really want a new one, without spending too much money. This one seems really attractive (even if I have to get new cooling and PSU). You guys know any good online store in EU that has it cheap?
Or should I wait for another card?
I have a amd 64 2.7+ and a X800 GT (I think), I really want a new one, without spending too much money. This one seems really attractive (even if I have to get new cooling and PSU). You guys know any good online store in EU that has it cheap?
Or should I wait for another card?
I think you would have to upgrade your CPU to see any benefits from a new video card.
I have a amd 64 2.7+ and a X800 GT (I think), I really want a new one, without spending too much money. This one seems really attractive (even if I have to get new cooling and PSU). You guys know any good online store in EU that has it cheap?
Or should I wait for another card?
I think you would have to upgrade your CPU to see any benefits from a new video card.
That would suck, I don't really have money to buy a new CPU right now.
I'd promised myself that I'll wait for the Nvidia 9XXX series, but this card is looking awesome.
I think I'll probably wait until next year and see how things pan out. My PC is only a bit over a year old, and still runs everything well enough, so I'm reluctant to be spending money on it yet.
The other thing I'll be doing is keeping an eye on the Aussie dollar. It's up to 93 US cents right now, so hardware is getting very cheap here.
It is? Shit is still ridiculously expensive from what I've seen.
Components are certainly dropping in price.
It looks like 512MB 8800GTs are going to end up selling for not much more than AU$300 (once they get in stock at places like MSY). A year ago, they would have sold for AU$400+, given their price in the US.
And the price drops are still trickling through, so things are only going to get better.
Of course, consumer electronics and prebuilt PCs are still a rip-off, but component prices are definitely benefiting from the strong Aussie dollar.
Sorry if this has already been discussed, but if I'm building a new computer and including an 8800gt, would I need a mobo with a PCI 2.0 slot to fully optimize the 8800gt?
No sir.
At this point, you wouldn't even see a performance boost.
I don't even know if PCIe 2.0 motherboards are out yet. Are they?
IIRC some P35 chipsets with DDR3 support also do PCIe2 support. The thing is current cards are still not using all the available bandwidth of PCIe1.1 or whatever is the current iteration. Or at least that's what I read.
but getting 2.0 version mobo would be a good idea for future proofing I would think.
Sorry if this has already been discussed, but if I'm building a new computer and including an 8800gt, would I need a mobo with a PCI 2.0 slot to fully optimize the 8800gt?
No sir.
At this point, you wouldn't even see a performance boost.
I don't even know if PCIe 2.0 motherboards are out yet. Are they?
IIRC some P35 chipsets with DDR3 support also do PCIe2 support. The thing is current cards are still not using all the available bandwidth of PCIe1.1 or whatever is the current iteration. Or at least that's what I read.
but getting 2.0 version mobo would be a good idea for future proofing I would think.
Nope. Video card interfaces have stayed well above graphic requirements since the inception of AGP. We weren't even close to maxing out AGP4X when we were already moving to PCI express from AGP8X. The only reason the latest and greatest cards aren't available in AGP8x form is because they can force us to get a lower performing part at a premium (considering that it is the best offered). Today, even though AGP is abandoned it's far from obsolete. In all cases, your system will be totally and completely obsolete before a graphics interface upgrade is "needed," so "future-proofing" is not the right way to put it. The only exception really is the cheapie Via/ECS boards being given away with modern CPUs that still have AGP. The modern CPUs in those just may well outlast its usefulness with an AGP card for gaming, though you'd have to be an idiot to keep the board... well, there's the "build a cheap system with another CPU and buy a good board too for two systems" scenario, but I only half approve.
I just got around to opening and installing mine yesterday, the backplate thing was horrible bent so i had to do some adjusting with pliers to get it to a sembalance of straight, but its working great now, + it looks like evga accidently threw in another copy of quake wars + cd key, so 280$ canadian shipped got me an 8800gt superclocked, hitman blood money, 2 copies of quake wars and a pretty good bioshock mousepad (they were all bundled together) pretty good purchase imo ;-)
It is? Shit is still ridiculously expensive from what I've seen.
Components are certainly dropping in price.
It looks like 512MB 8800GTs are going to end up selling for not much more than AU$300 (once they get in stock at places like MSY). A year ago, they would have sold for AU$400+, given their price in the US.
And the price drops are still trickling through, so things are only going to get better.
Of course, consumer electronics and prebuilt PCs are still a rip-off, but component prices are definitely benefiting from the strong Aussie dollar.
IT always supprises me how much more popular PC gaming is in like europe and asia, desipte the fact that they're arguably even more expensive than game consoles (in comparison to US prices).
Not that I don't trust FreddyD, but can anyone else confirm what he said? With a amd64 3.7+ it doesn't justify to buy a new graphics card?
Personally, I think you'd see definite benefits.
One way to see if your PC is CPU-bound is to decrease the resolution of a few games to something like 800x600 or 640x480. If the frame rate doesn't improve significantly, then the CPU is the limiting factor.
If it does improve, then your GPU is probably the limiting factor, and you will be able to get better performance at higher resolutions with a new graphics card.
Not that I don't trust FreddyD, but can anyone else confirm what he said? With a amd64 3.7+ it doesn't justify to buy a new graphics card?
Personally, I think you'd see definite benefits.
One way to see if your PC is CPU-bound is to decrease the resolution of a few games to something like 800x600 or 640x480. If the frame rate doesn't improve significantly, then the CPU is the limiting factor.
If it does improve, then your GPU is probably the limiting factor, and you will be able to get better performance at higher resolutions with a new graphics card.
You'll definitely see huge improvements to many games. Recent LAN I was at had a guy with a 3500+ and an 8800GTS as well as a guy with an AMD FX62 and 7800GTXs in SLI. The 8800 was playing games in considerably higher res and detail modes. Very few games really stress the CPU, but every game stresses the g/card.
Not that I don't trust FreddyD, but can anyone else confirm what he said? With a amd64 3.7+ it doesn't justify to buy a new graphics card?
Personally, I think you'd see definite benefits.
One way to see if your PC is CPU-bound is to decrease the resolution of a few games to something like 800x600 or 640x480. If the frame rate doesn't improve significantly, then the CPU is the limiting factor.
If it does improve, then your GPU is probably the limiting factor, and you will be able to get better performance at higher resolutions with a new graphics card.
You'll definitely see huge improvements to many games. Recent LAN I was at had a guy with a 3500+ and an 8800GTS as well as a guy with an AMD FX62 and 7800GTXs in SLI. The 8800 was playing games in considerably higher res and detail modes. Very few games really stress the CPU, but every game stresses the g/card.
That typo back there threw me off. A 3700+ is much more capable than an Athlon XP 2700+. The memory and fsb limitations on a socket A PC would have crippled your framerate more than any CPU limitations.
If you are really CPU bottlenecked, you can increase the resolution and settings without experiencing any changes in the frame rate. So if you play at GPU limited settings you probably wouldn't notice much of a difference.
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sketchyblargh / Steam! / Tumblr Prime
I believe the $200 card will be the 256MB version. Right now manufacturers are taking advantage of consumers a bit.
Shogun Streams Vidya
So wait, is the 256MB version the one that everyone's getting all hyped about? Or are the tech comparisons being done using a 512MB card? Will the 256MB card be performing that well?
Forgive my tech-dumbery... I'm just trying to figure out if the 512 version is worth the extra cost, or if I should wait.
sketchyblargh / Steam! / Tumblr Prime
After buying my 6800GT from BFG, I'm only ever buying BFG for personal gaming purposes.
Edit: I just went there again; that splash thingie wasn't on the front page. I must have looked before the embargo lifted.
Edit: NOoooooooooooooooo. They have a BFG store which doesn't ship outside the US. FARK.
2560x1600 is a fucking huge resolution to test at (the FPS being steady at above 30 shows some power). I can't imagine many people run programs at that setting, but I have a feeling I'm going to be proven wrong.
Statement: E-peen beacon unlocked and primed. Prepare for inbound e-peen demonstrations in 5... 4...
No sir.
Shogun Streams Vidya
I don't even know if PCIe 2.0 motherboards are out yet. Are they?
IIRC some P35 chipsets with DDR3 support also do PCIe2 support. The thing is current cards are still not using all the available bandwidth of PCIe1.1 or whatever is the current iteration. Or at least that's what I read.
Shogun Streams Vidya
Or should I wait for another card?
Pokémon HGSS: 1205 1613 4041
That would suck, I don't really have money to buy a new CPU right now.
Pokémon HGSS: 1205 1613 4041
I'd promised myself that I'll wait for the Nvidia 9XXX series, but this card is looking awesome.
I think I'll probably wait until next year and see how things pan out. My PC is only a bit over a year old, and still runs everything well enough, so I'm reluctant to be spending money on it yet.
The other thing I'll be doing is keeping an eye on the Aussie dollar. It's up to 93 US cents right now, so hardware is getting very cheap here.
:?
I'm trying to wait until end of Q1 2008 to buy myself an upgrade. All I will be playing though is HGL for the foreseeable future, at least on the PC.
Components are certainly dropping in price.
It looks like 512MB 8800GTs are going to end up selling for not much more than AU$300 (once they get in stock at places like MSY). A year ago, they would have sold for AU$400+, given their price in the US.
And the price drops are still trickling through, so things are only going to get better.
Of course, consumer electronics and prebuilt PCs are still a rip-off, but component prices are definitely benefiting from the strong Aussie dollar.
but getting 2.0 version mobo would be a good idea for future proofing I would think.
PSN: super_emu
Xbox360 Gamertag: Emuchop
Nope. Video card interfaces have stayed well above graphic requirements since the inception of AGP. We weren't even close to maxing out AGP4X when we were already moving to PCI express from AGP8X. The only reason the latest and greatest cards aren't available in AGP8x form is because they can force us to get a lower performing part at a premium (considering that it is the best offered). Today, even though AGP is abandoned it's far from obsolete. In all cases, your system will be totally and completely obsolete before a graphics interface upgrade is "needed," so "future-proofing" is not the right way to put it. The only exception really is the cheapie Via/ECS boards being given away with modern CPUs that still have AGP. The modern CPUs in those just may well outlast its usefulness with an AGP card for gaming, though you'd have to be an idiot to keep the board... well, there's the "build a cheap system with another CPU and buy a good board too for two systems" scenario, but I only half approve.
IT always supprises me how much more popular PC gaming is in like europe and asia, desipte the fact that they're arguably even more expensive than game consoles (in comparison to US prices).
don't jump on the GT just yet if you guys have the patience.
http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=9474
edit: if this does happen, I have serious doubt that it would be called 8800gts..
PSN: super_emu
Xbox360 Gamertag: Emuchop
Pokémon HGSS: 1205 1613 4041
Personally, I think you'd see definite benefits.
One way to see if your PC is CPU-bound is to decrease the resolution of a few games to something like 800x600 or 640x480. If the frame rate doesn't improve significantly, then the CPU is the limiting factor.
If it does improve, then your GPU is probably the limiting factor, and you will be able to get better performance at higher resolutions with a new graphics card.
I can SLI two of these motherfuckers for 2/3rds of that and an extra 1/3'rd performance under optional conditions.
Fuck yeah.
You'll definitely see huge improvements to many games. Recent LAN I was at had a guy with a 3500+ and an 8800GTS as well as a guy with an AMD FX62 and 7800GTXs in SLI. The 8800 was playing games in considerably higher res and detail modes. Very few games really stress the CPU, but every game stresses the g/card.
Pokémon HGSS: 1205 1613 4041
If you are really CPU bottlenecked, you can increase the resolution and settings without experiencing any changes in the frame rate. So if you play at GPU limited settings you probably wouldn't notice much of a difference.