Thursday, February 22nd 2007
AGP is not dead - Nvidia brings the G84 AGP
According to "the the most reliable source on earth", NVIDIA plans to introduce a DirectX10 and AGP compatible graphics chip in April of this year. The G84 AGP will be pin-compatible to the GeForce 7600 GPU, so it should not be that complicated to build a graphics card around it.
Source:
TheInquirer
50 Comments on AGP is not dead - Nvidia brings the G84 AGP
:)
* & "GOOD NEWS", for AGP using folks!
APK
@Topic
Well, hope AGP users will be happy with their crappy mobos ;p
Accelerated Graphics Port.. why can they make and agp 16x? pointless? to make the board based for gaming, only makes since to have and pathway meant for graphix...It still works unless your going to be playing a game coming out in five years...
Just ONE example: www.asrock.com/mb/overview.asp?Model=ConRoe865PE
While PCIe is good, but, it isn't much better than PCI for 99.9% of users. It makes a big difference for servers running multiple gigabit networks on RAID arrays. But for the normal user:
1./ The BEST GPU's are able to perform at 95% on PCIe4, and 99% on PCIe8. The bandwodth on PCIe16 just isn't being used.
2./ DDR2 is not better than DDR clock for clock. In fact, slower. Admitedly, DDR2 is more power efficient... but then again... the power savings are miniscule compared to the EXTRA power needed for modern GPU
3./ Many people... incl. my company... have tens of thousands of $ invested in perfectly good AGP DDR systems. It costs a fraction to upgrade a mainboard to Conroe Core 2 Duo capability with GPU and recycle 4GB RAM and a $500 workstation AGP card than replace RAM and AGP.
4./ Until a new platform can outperform by an order of magnitute then there is no reason to change the platform for platform's sake
5./ I'd love to upgrade... but will wait for PCIe v2.00 and DDR3. Both of these are BIGGER upgrades over PCIe and DDR2 than PCIe and DDR2 were over PCI and DDR. >> I'm sorry for you that later this year you will have to throw out all your kit to upgrade again to DDR3 and PCIe16 v2.0
really, i can find the posts proving this...
That's pretty nifty that they would be supporting AGP for just a bit longer though. It would make the transition to Vista easier for some people I bet.
But if you are happy with a X1950Pro or X1950XT then these ARE available in AGP. So for the price of an ASROCK board... you can upgrade your CPU or GPU or both whist keeping your existing RAM and/or GPU.
And the ASROCK mainboards take Quad Core 2. Hence you can have a pretty top system without spending a fortune on new RAM or new GPU. You can go Quad Core 2 and still use your 9800 or X800 etc. This is my situation. I have a FireGL X3. I'm very content with it. But I'd like a Quad Core 2 for statistical processing and video encoding. So I can go this route for just $250... take my 4GB across and my FireGL X3 across to the new board.
Anyone else would be spending an extra $400 on RAM and $600 on another CAD GPU. Their spend:$1250. My spend $250. See the difference?
Obviously they are not going to make an AGP version of the 8800 GTX for the 0.1% of people with 775 and AGP.
Not to mention that motherboards that have AGP and 775 CANNOT support Core 2 Duo and definetely not Quad-Core Kentsfield. They will support Pentium D at the very most, and those arent much better than Pentium 4.
They do have DDr3 cards out for AGP the card I have (x1600xt XGE)is probobly the cheapest, and as mentioned before the x1950xt etc, So they are also SM3 and are quite capable at perforing in the 7900 series range
5./ I'd love to upgrade... but will wait for PCIe v2.00 and DDR3. Both of these are BIGGER upgrades over PCIe and DDR2 than PCIe and DDR2 were over PCI and DDR. >> I'm sorry for you that later this year you will have to throw out all your kit to upgrade again to DDR3 and PCIe16 v2.0
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Via completlybonkers