Friday, March 25th 2011
Palit Announces GeForce GTX 590 Limited Edition Graphics Card
Palit Microsystems Ltd, the leading graphics card manufacturer, releases the most powerful dual-GPU graphics card- Palit GeForce GTX 590. With dual Fermi-based GTX 500 GPUs, vapor chamber cooler and the world's fastest speed, Palit GeForce GTX 590 is the strongest DirectX 11 graphics card on the planet. Palit GeForce GTX 590 is now available in Russia, Australia and Japan for you to experience the breathtaking gaming performance.
Armed with dual 512-core GPU that clocked at 607MHz and 3GB of GDDR5 memory at 1707MHz, Palit GeForce GTX 590 simply is the world's fastest Dx11 graphics card. The twin GTX 500 GPUs combine to deliver the astonishing DirectX 11 gaming experience that can devastate competing GPUs with ease by offering 20% higher performance. And with NVIDIA 3D Vision Surround technology, you can now have the optimized 3D gaming under multi-monitor setting form a single Palit GeForce GTX 590.In addition, the 3GB of high speed GDDR5 memory allows even the most intensive titles be played at best image quality settings under 2560 x 1600 resolution with full screen anti-aliasing. Palit GeForce GTX 590 is perfect for multi-monitor high-res 3D gaming. While connecting two Palit GeForce GTX 590s in Quad SLI, you can create the most powerful gaming rig you ever have.
To ensure the extreme performance and stability, the thermal design of Palit GeForce GTX 590 includes two custom vapor chambers which cool far more effectively than conventional heat sinks, a controlled evaporation and SLI-optimized cover design. Palit GeForce GTX 590 provides optimal cooling and enables a quiet gaming experience. Support by triple dual-link DVI connectors, you can play your favorite games across three 1080P screens in full stereoscopic 3D. And the mini-DisplayPort connector powers the latest DisplayPort panels at resolutions up to 2560 x 1600. Palit GeForce GTX 590 is designed for enthusiasts who demands maximum performance.
Featuring the devastating power of dual GTX 500 GPUs, vapor chamber cooler, triple dual-link DVI ports and the premium GTX technologies support including the unbeatable Quad SLI, Palit GeForce GTX 590 has everything all hardcore gamers desired.
Armed with dual 512-core GPU that clocked at 607MHz and 3GB of GDDR5 memory at 1707MHz, Palit GeForce GTX 590 simply is the world's fastest Dx11 graphics card. The twin GTX 500 GPUs combine to deliver the astonishing DirectX 11 gaming experience that can devastate competing GPUs with ease by offering 20% higher performance. And with NVIDIA 3D Vision Surround technology, you can now have the optimized 3D gaming under multi-monitor setting form a single Palit GeForce GTX 590.In addition, the 3GB of high speed GDDR5 memory allows even the most intensive titles be played at best image quality settings under 2560 x 1600 resolution with full screen anti-aliasing. Palit GeForce GTX 590 is perfect for multi-monitor high-res 3D gaming. While connecting two Palit GeForce GTX 590s in Quad SLI, you can create the most powerful gaming rig you ever have.
To ensure the extreme performance and stability, the thermal design of Palit GeForce GTX 590 includes two custom vapor chambers which cool far more effectively than conventional heat sinks, a controlled evaporation and SLI-optimized cover design. Palit GeForce GTX 590 provides optimal cooling and enables a quiet gaming experience. Support by triple dual-link DVI connectors, you can play your favorite games across three 1080P screens in full stereoscopic 3D. And the mini-DisplayPort connector powers the latest DisplayPort panels at resolutions up to 2560 x 1600. Palit GeForce GTX 590 is designed for enthusiasts who demands maximum performance.
Featuring the devastating power of dual GTX 500 GPUs, vapor chamber cooler, triple dual-link DVI ports and the premium GTX technologies support including the unbeatable Quad SLI, Palit GeForce GTX 590 has everything all hardcore gamers desired.
4 Comments on Palit Announces GeForce GTX 590 Limited Edition Graphics Card
I realise all of the manufacturers need to tow the line until a decent fix comes along from nVidia, but really?
BTW: this in no way reflects upon your reporting, BTA :)