Friday, December 9th 2011
Sapphire provides Eyefinity on the cheap with the Radeon HD 6450 FleX
If all you want this Christmas is an Eyefinity setup but can't afford to invest much in a graphics card then you may be interested in Sapphire's latest creation, the Radeon HD 6450 FleX. This card comes with a sub-60 Euro price tag and is able to power three DVI monitors right out of the box.
Sapphire's HD 6450 FleX takes up two PCI slots, comes with a blue PCB and features a passive cooler, 160 Stream Processors, a GPU clock of 625 MHz, a 64-bit memory interface, 1GB of DDR3 memory set to 1600 MHz, UVD (Unified Video Decoder) 3, and three display outputs, a single-link DVI, a dual-link DVI, and a HDMI 1.4a port (a HDMI to DVI adapter is included in the box).
The Radeon HD 6450 FleX can be found on pre-order priced as low as 54.37 Euro.
Sapphire's HD 6450 FleX takes up two PCI slots, comes with a blue PCB and features a passive cooler, 160 Stream Processors, a GPU clock of 625 MHz, a 64-bit memory interface, 1GB of DDR3 memory set to 1600 MHz, UVD (Unified Video Decoder) 3, and three display outputs, a single-link DVI, a dual-link DVI, and a HDMI 1.4a port (a HDMI to DVI adapter is included in the box).
The Radeon HD 6450 FleX can be found on pre-order priced as low as 54.37 Euro.
31 Comments on Sapphire provides Eyefinity on the cheap with the Radeon HD 6450 FleX
OK. Yes, I'm sure you are right, there is a niche somewhere for this product. But, anyway, let's not split hairs. At the current launch pricing, for most people, there are other, better, cheaper options.
And I wasn't just talking about this thread, I'm talking about most eyefinity discussions in general. I've seen more than one time when people say "eyefinity is great because you can have a messenger up on another monitor while gaming". I'm amazed at the number of people that thing eyefninity is the only option for multi-monitor support. Exactly, except for an extremely small niche, this product is useless. And even in that niche, there are better options, like not going mini-ITX.
Sorry, newtekie, but that's just a stupid argument. Most people aren't inclined to cut apart electronics, cheap or not, and jsut want soemthing that works straight out of the box with no hassles. Insanely easy to you is not insanely easy to everyone.