8800gt goes nice. I like mine. I thought there may have been a 'real' new geforce 9 around about now but it seems quiet in the nvidia camp at the moment. Lack of competition from AMD/ATI I suppose.
But thats the thing, you have the G92 8800s (GS/GT/GTS512) which by the sounds of the 9 in G92 are 9xxx series cards with an 8xxx series name. I think they are just having trouble making anything faster at the moment seeing as either can AMD/ATi.
I mean their top line card now has 2x GPUs on it, and we all know how well that works out in the real world.
No, we don't all. Tell us, please.
Aren't there several multi-core cards available? What is it that creates problems?
I think he is getting at the fact that performance gains are nowhere near two-fold and quite often a paltry 10% in a lot of games. They are just generally a clumsy design.
Yeah that, at best you might get about 30% performance boost in real world gaming situations. Considering its to GPU cores and costs an ass load.... meh.
Maybe I'm confused by my understanding of camera and lighting equipment on real world things in three dimensions, in real time, but in order to really make a benchmark improvement in speed and power in computing, don't you really need to use a logarithmic scale rather than a linear scale to compare terms and processes?
Adding to this ""real world"" application of our thought processes, wouldn't you really need to think of improving computing capabilities in the cube range at least rather than at 2X?
I know that Odeon is more the physicist than I, but aren't gamers and graphics companies generally computing in THREE dimensions in order to increase the graphic realism?
If so then "doubling your power" (like adding one processor) would lead to virtually no gain, right? For instance, if you are going to move one hundred pixels in three dimensional space, don't you need to calculate at least one hundred thousand positions in order to make any movement predictable. That only gets you started yet, also.
Anyway, I'm not trying to sound like a know-it-all, I'm trying to ask a complex question in a simple way.