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Manli Announces its GeForce GT 710 Graphics Cards

Even though this wouldn't be a big seller and the performance isn't great, there are certainly uses for it, including:
- Usage of an old PC as a HTPC, due to great h264 support. No h265 support unfortunately.
- Great Linux support.
- Enterprise quality OpenGL, OpenCL and CUDA support.
- Less microstutter.

I think this one will take gt210 place.
Exactly.
 
It's DDR3 actually (the same used for PCs), not GDDR3.
Manufacturers often misuse this

Yeah, when it was first posted at least it still said "GDDR3" which confused me because I remember it being "DDR3" before.
 
Where the heck did you get screwed into that? They are $20-30 AMIR here.

GDDR5? That is very, very, very good if true.
 
I get a small discount where I work...:roll:

That is seriously a good price. That card is pretty capable, perfect for an entry level system or for mobas and WoW.
 
I just noticed this card has Adaptive VSync, which ... is not the same as GSync.

Did nVidia just silently adopt AMD pushed freesync technology?
 
I just noticed this card has Adaptive VSync, which ... is not the same as GSync.

Did nVidia just silently adopt AMD pushed freesync technology?

Adaptive _Vsync_ it's the tech nvidia introduced in kepler launch:
The last of the three big features is Adaptive V-Sync. The feature improves on traditional V-Sync, by dynamically adjusting the frame limiter to ensure smoother gameplay. Traditional V-Sync merely sends frame data to the screen after every full screen refresh. This means if a frame arrives slow, because the GPU took longer to render it, it will have to wait a full screen refresh before it can be displayed, effectively reducing frame rate to 30 FPS. If rendering a frame takes longer than two full refreshes, the frame rate will even drop down to 20 FPS. These framerate differences are very noticeable during gaming because they are so huge.
What Adaptive V-Sync does is, it makes the transition between frame-rate drop and synchronized frame-rate smooth, alleviating lag. It achieves this by dynamically adjusting the value that V-Sync takes into account when limiting frame-rates. I did some testing of this feature and found it to work as advertised. Of course this does not completely eliminate frame rate differences, but it makes them less noticeable.
 
Nvidia is only doing what they must do, cleaning out the shelves. It's actually the job and the responsibility of the professionals and (especially the) journalists to let the people know if a product is worth it or not.
 
These aren't very MANLI cards....
 
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