Fermi Benchmarks Revealed...

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Fermi Benchmarks Revealed...

Postby stoperror » Sat 27 Mar, 2010 11:34 am

I've been waiting until NVIDIA releases their new graphics card to get a new graphics card. And then.. I read the review for the GTX 480 and 470. Basically, the new NVIDIA cards are 10 to 15% faster, but run hotter and use more power. (Here I was hoping they'd wipe the proverbial floor with the ATI cards so there would be a price drop, so I could get better card for cheaper).

What do you think about the new cards? Are they the new ATI HD 2900XTX from 3 years prior? Will NVIDIA be able to fix this? Are you going to get one anyway just for the minor performance boost over the ATI 58xx/5970 cards?
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Postby Mandrake » Sat 27 Mar, 2010 10:37 pm

The Radeon 5970 is still far faster than a GTX 480, if you can stomach the crazy cost. They lowered clockspeeds from the 5870 to 5850 level (though it's still a full GPU, they didn't disable any stream processors, TMUs etc.) and specifically binned low voltage GPUs to stay within the same thermal envelope as the 4870 X2 and GTX 295 (the dual GPU cards from previous generation). The result was a video card that is insanely fast with surprisingly tame power consumption.

The GTX 470 and 480 frankly don't offer enough of a boost over the Radeon 5850 and 5870 respectively to justify their higher price, higher power consumption, the additional heat and the noisy coolers IMO. One thing that impressed me was the new Anti-Aliasing techniques that Nvidia has introduced with the GTX 470 and 480, the quality was terrific. On another note though, the fact that they made no improvements to the Anisotropic Filtering has disappointed me (this is after AMD/ATI introduced what is close to perfect Anisotropic filtering with the Radeon 5xxx). Last, but most certainly not least, is the fact that you can't buy a Fermi video card yet. Nvidia is promising they'll be available in April. Paper launching a new generation of cards Nvidia? Big mistake.

With such high power consumption I'm really doubting Nvidia's ability to launch a dual-GPU version of Fermi to compete with the Radeon 5970, so this round has to go to AMD/ATI. I think it's fair to say that Fermi is a flop in the eyes of gamers and has not met expectations. AMD/ATI are probably very happy with the prices their cards are at right now, so I wouldn't count on any price cuts any time soon.

As for myself, I bought one of these a while back.
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Postby Antony » Sun 28 Mar, 2010 12:42 am

Mandrake wrote:As for myself, I bought one of these a while back.
Wow! 1GB of GDDR5! Must be very powerful and fast!
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Re: Fermi Benchmarks Revealed...

Postby stoperror » Mon 12 Jul, 2010 4:26 pm

The GTX 460 (based on a tweaked version of Fermi) seems to be the "new 8800GT" in terms of price to performance. AND it appears that it overclocks like a Celeron 300A and then some. If I was going to buy a new graphics card now, I would go for the GTX 460 (and I'm an ATI fanboy eg: AMD CPU, AMD chipset, AMD GPU).
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Re: Fermi Benchmarks Revealed...

Postby Mandrake » Tue 13 Jul, 2010 10:01 pm

I agree totally. The 1GB version has terrific price/performance. Buying two of these cards is also a great setup for high end setups like a 30" monitor or multi-monitor setups for gaming.

It's interesting reading my previous comments. Nvidia released the 470 and 480 with pretty good availability which was good to see. FWIW, there are rumors that a dual-GPU Nvidia card based on the GF104 GPU with all 384 stream processors (the 460 has 48 of them disabled) is on the way to try and wrestle away the performance crown with the 5970.
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