I have a driver combination at work which will run Nvidia and Ati cards with both drivers on the one PC without trouble, not working together to scale performance but running at the same time and stable, they're fairly old drivers now and its XP Pro 32bit, I'll find the version numbers and let you guys know
installed on an old Socket 939 premium gigabyte mobo.
Yes, but can you guarantee that *ANY* driver combination will work?
Anyway I don't see why we need to try so much to mix up video cards from ATI and nVidia... it's not like we've fixed all the technical problems in the world, and this is the one thing that keeps us from achieving ascension.
I don't think you guys have seen the actual demo... There is no actual balancing like SLI and CF are doing (splitting up a frame into regions or rendering alternative frames). The chip is actually splitting the scene into it's objects, in the demo the walls and the gun (it was some kind of FPS game) were rendered by one of the cards, the ceiling, floor and other objects were rendered by the other card. The Lucid chip then reassembled the scene from the existing rendered objects.
I find this method insanely complicated and if it even works I think there will be complications until the end of time. For example it was not explained if AA modes actually work. Can you think of a good way of mixing up AA modes from ATI with AA modes from nVidia? Can you think of a good way of mixing up models rendered by an ATI card with the models rendered by an nVidia card? I mean they use very different ways of optimizing a scene. I know ATI cards can actually skip rendering the parts of the objects that would not be visible in a scene, overriding what the engine tells it to render (the reason why so many new games had rendering errors with older drivers). Can you think how you'll ensure the quality level setup in the ATI driver will match the one in the nVidia driver?
You can't mix two drivers with a Lucid chip. It's the first time I heard about the miracle Lucid chip version that would do this and I've been listening very close and following this from day one. You can mix them up now, on non-Lucid boards, but I don't think you can actually have any benefit while gaming.