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Nvidia Launches GeForce GTX 200 Series, And AMD Announces ATI Radeon 4800 Series أرسل من قبل foaad في الثلاثاء, 2008/06/17 - 2:58am.
Yesterday nVidia has launched their true successor to the 8800 graphics cards series (forget about the 9800) the GeForce GTX 200.
Not surprisingly at the same time AMD has announced their next graphics cards series ATI Radeon 4800. What's more interesting all of the announced cards don't really compete directly with each others, Where nVidia's GTX 280 and GTX 260 are supposed to retail at around $650 and $400 respectively, AMD's offers Radeon 4870 and 4850 at around $300 and $200 respectively. More! ( هاردوير )
GeForce nVidia's GTX 280 and GTX 260 are amazing !
Then you should stick with your integrated graphics chip But really they're too expensive ! I won't pay more than 150 $ for each one ! Seriously though lately AMD have been delivering a much higher "bang for the buck" ratio than nVidia it's amazing to hear that Radeon 4850 will sell for as little as $200. I usually shell out around $400 each year or so on graphics cards
Then you should stick with your integrated graphics chip
Well,I'm really satisfied with my "ATI RAGE 128 PRO"
I usually shell out around $400 each year or so on graphics cards
400$ each year !!! Oh ! you are the man Yeah, I've heared that nvidia will support "Physx" in it's hardware, i think it will be really amazing thing
9800 GTX wasn't better than the 8800GTX anyway. but what was interesting about it was it's price, this continue to be the case with the 9800 GTX+ at $229 it'll deliver an amazing price/performance ratio. I guess they don't want to leave the sub $300 market for AMD/ATI to dominate (with their upcoming 4800 series).
Yeah, I've heared that nvidia will support "Physx" in it's hardware, i think it will be really amazing thing
They have lately purchased AGIA (the company behind Physx engine and card).But I'm not sure using the GPU for handling physics calculations is a good idea, after all most modern games performance are only limited by the GPU performance (GPU is the bottleneck) and we're paying too much for the CPU anyway, so we might use it as well too. Sure GPU is better suited for this kind of calculations but what's the point if you're already using 100% of its power for graphics rendering (unless you're getting over 60 FPS which is not the case for 99.9% of gamers out there). |
But really they're too expensive !
I won't pay more than 150 $ for each one !