Complete Nvidia GTX280 Scores Posted 44
Groo Wanderer writes "Since boredom is a dangerous thing on the weekends, I decided to alleviate mine by running 233 benchmarks on the new GT280. This includes 28 gaming related tests across up to nine resolutions, and 9800GTX numbers thrown in for good measure. Since there were no NDAs involved in getting you these numbers, we are not bound by the pesky NDA that lifts tomorrow. You can read all of the numbers here; enjoy."
Re:i see one little thing (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Great (Score:4, Informative)
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AA? (Score:2)
I allways find it interesting how people want to run crazy resolutions, w/ AA maxed.
Am I way off the mark here? What does
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Re:Slashdot: Keeping your wallet full since 1998. (Score:5, Informative)
To add insult to injury, the TDPs of the 260 and 280 are 182W and 236W respectively. This means big copper heatsinks, possibly heatpipes, and high-end fans.
The GT200 is about six months late, blew out their die size estimates and missed clock targets by a lot. ATI didn't. This means that buying a GT260 board will cost about 50 per cent more than an R770 for equivalent performance. The GT280 will be about 25 per cent faster but cost more than twice as much. A month or so after the 770 comes the 700, basically two 770s on a slab. This will crush the GT280 in just about every conceivable benchmark and likely cost less.
Re:Slashdot: Keeping your wallet full since 1998. (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824001098 [newegg.com] $1,299 = 30"
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16889234003 [newegg.com] $1,199 = 47"
that particular set has a PC connection, 2 dvi ports and 1 hdmi, and here's the kicker, the difference in response time?
i've heard before that Westinghouse displays are basically big PC monitors, with a TV tuner attached.
now i know, a HDTV generally only supports 1080p, 1080i, 720p, and 480i on the HD inputs, and since this one has PC inputs on the pc input it accepts 1920 x 1080, 640 x 480, 800 x 600, 1024 x 768 on the PC input... finding a RGB PC cable is easy, i used to specifically pick out PC monitors with replaceable cables, in case the cable got cut/kinked or the end pins broken.. so i already have cables from old monitors!
is it really worth it to support 2560x1600 resolution? especially since modern (single card setups) gaming cards can't even handle 1080p on modern game engines.. and even with multi card support, the CPU winds up being a limiting factor... OCing to 4 ghz with some extreme cooling solution, like the xp-120 or water cooling... is probably the only way to really push frame rates, even with a SLI/crossfire solution.
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I keep wondering why people buy 30" computer monitors... is there something wrong with a 1080p 46" TV set?
Erm, yeah, plenty; first, it's huge. 30" is marginal for a monitor you want to fit on a desk and sit 25" away from, 46" is going to be stupid.
Second, the TV set has a crappy resolution for its size; 1920×1080? If I wanted that resolution I'd get a 24" monitor (or two) which is at least going to have a sensible DPI for, well, a monitor.
here's the kicker, the difference in response time? .5 ms the Samsung has 6ms the Westinghouse has 6.5ms
Haha, right, a mere .5ms difference in dubious response time measurements sure does make for a kicker; I can't even tell the difference between my 16ms 20"'s and my 8
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Also at 2560x1600 resolution, CPU would not even factor in modern PC games. At that resolution, graphics cards w
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in my specific setting i will be 4 feet from the monitor on my couch. a desk it might be harder, but i know how i'm building my next system, and where i'm using it, my fall back plan if to have a computer desk, in front of the tv stand my hdtv is on, i'll still be 2-3 feet away, which is plenty. my folks just got a 50" tv, so i have a really good idea just how far back i need to sit, i wasn't thinking in
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But a big problem occured that I didn't account for. Eveyrthing is blurry and all text and images look like crap. Forget even being close to sharp. Everything looks like it was run through high JPEG compression.
As it turns out, LCD TV's can't do lower than 96 dpi. most LCD *monitors* do much lower, which we take for granted--it makes m
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you brought up an excellent point. i thought the same thing--so i did it. hooked up a beautiful 40" 1080p LCD TV to my computer (but keep in mind u need a DVI-HDMI converter).
But a big problem occured that I didn't account for. Eveyrthing is blurry and all text and images look like crap. Forget even being close to sharp. Everything looks like it was run through high JPEG compression.
As it turns out, LCD TV's can't do lower than 96 dpi. most LCD *monitors* do much lower, which we take for granted--it makes monitors look so sharp. So unfortunately, unless u barely use ur computer or u just don't care, that 30" or or any LCD monitor for that matter, is necessary.
which set, specifically were you looking at? some sets literally do run the image through some form of conversion/compression. some LCD tvs actually Are computer monitor guts, YMMV but there are sets that can do better than 96dpi.
you specifically mentioned a 'dvi to hdmi' cable, the set i'm looking at has a standard VGA jack in the back. with a dvi to hdmi link, you have to be very careful, to use a DVI-dual link cable that converts to HDMI, if you use a half link cable, there won't be enough bandwidth f
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Hmmm--very good points. The set in question is a Sony Bravia, 1080p, 40 in. (do not have the model number on hand) set. It's gorgeous for DVD and TV viewing. I mean incredible. I did use the VGA connection, but images looked washed out, and in playing games it had that effect during fast images that monitors with a pure digital connection (DVI) do not have. That's why I figured to go DVI -> HDMI. I'll test it again and let you know so you don't have to make a $2000 mistake :).
I wouldn't count the chicks before they hatch (Score:2, Insightful)
I also wouldn't take any theoretical numbers as gospel. For either of the two. They both love to talk about theoretical gigatexels per second and GB/s of memory bandwidth as if the pipelines will always be fully used, every cycle, and memory was a continuous read that never had any RAS and CAS cycles in there.
But especially for ATI. They have th
What about TV out? (Score:1)
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The only real snag I've had was using an adapter other than the one supplied by XFX. I have an S-video to Composite cable with integrated 3.5mm stereo to rca audio, but that didn't work even with Force TV Detection checked.
Once I tried the adapter that came in the box I had no problems setting up TV-out in XP, Vista, and Linux.
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As far as aspect ratios are concerned, widescreen shows up letterboxed with a small ammount of the sides truncated, maybe 5% on each side. Not noticeable until I checked just now. 4:3 ratio videos show up perfectly as you would expect.
Raw power isn't everything (Score:2, Informative)
3DMark Obsoletion (Score:1)
Before... (Score:2)
GPU size, 65/55nm [wikipedia.org], pipelines 240 vs Mainstream 192, Mem-Bus 512 vs 448 Mainstream , so basically this means that the next generation mainstream card will be 80% as fast as this card.
Allright, so for $250-300 (in aproxx 6 months)you can get a GFX9800 x 1.2. Not too shabby, especially as this is the generation of PC games that kicks console asses.
Rock on nVidia, catch up time ATI... god I hope these things are user prog