Bo_Fox
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System Name | Flame Vortec Fatal1ty (rig1), UV Tourmaline Confexia (rig2) |
---|---|
Processor | 2 x Core i7's 4+Gigahertzzies |
Motherboard | BL00DR4G3 and DFI UT-X58 T3eH8 |
Cooling | Thermalright IFX-14 (better than TRUE) 2x push-push, Customized TT Big Typhoon |
Memory | 6GB OCZ DDR3-1600 CAS7-7-7-1T, 6GB for 2nd rig |
Video Card(s) | 8800GTX for "free" S3D (mtbs3d.com), 4870 1GB, HDTV Wonder (DRM-free) |
Storage | WD RE3 1TB, Caviar Black 1TB 7.2k, 500GB 7.2k, Raptor X 10k |
Display(s) | Sony GDM-FW900 24" CRT oc'ed to 2560x1600@68Hz, Dell 2405FPW 24" PVA (HDCP-free) |
Case | custom gutted-out painted black case, silver UV case, lots of aesthetics-souped stuff |
Audio Device(s) | Sonar X-Fi MB, Bernstein audio riser.. what?? |
Power Supply | OCZ Fatal1ty 700W, Iceberg 680W, Fortron Booster X3 300W for GPU |
Software | 2 partitions WinXP-32 on 2 drives per rig, 2 of Vista64 on 2 drives per rig |
Benchmark Scores | 5.9 Vista Experience Index... yay!!! What??? :) |
A very interesting read from TechReport:
Inside Fermi's graphics architecture
Insider info and careful speculation take us deep into Nvidia's next GPU
http://techreport.com/articles.x/17815/4
Unless I have misunderstood it badly, they are pretty confident that high-end GeForce Fermi (GTX380) will be at least twice as fast as the GTX285:
IMO they are saying "Look at our HD5870 review, because we have GTX285 SLI results there and that's the kind of performance we expect from Fermi cards". That's what I've been thinking since I saw the white papers, I have no reason to think GTX380 will not be at least twice as fast as GTX285. I had no reason to think HD5870 would not be twice as fast as HD4890 either, but the "failure" of one doesn't imply the failure of the other one, especially when Fermi is a complete redesign and RV870 is the last implementation of an aging architecture that IMHO was never thought to be taken to 1600 SPs*.
*In a "beind the scenes" story about RV770 (I think it was in Anadtech) AMD engineer for RV770 said that RV770 was meant to have 640 SPs, until Ati realised they could put 800 SPs within their die area budget and power envelope, due to the high die area efficiency. Another double up would have put RV870 in 1280 SPs and not 1600. IMO that was the plan when R600 was designed and the reason for RV870 not scaling so well.
Here's a sincere reply this time..
Yep, you're right about the 640 SPs.. but that's not too huge of a difference. 640 to 800 or 1280 to 1600 is 25% more. Perhaps you are right that ATI never planned on doing 1600 shaders with this architecture, but it did an astoundingly amazing job with 800 shaders so ATI wanted to just double everything (including the ROP's).. except for the bandwidth of course.
Ok, back to the topic..
It looks like the Fermi will be 2x as fast as the GTX 285, if not a tiny bit more. I would agree that it's gonna be 2x, but some people think that the Fermi architecture will be mainly optimized for CUDA and not for games. That does not make sense.. perhaps CUDA is being given more emphasis, but Nvidia should in no way ignore us gamers (who make up most of the customers).
GT300's specs looks like it will be:
512 shaders (highly likely)
48 ROP's (likely)
384-bit (likely)
GDDR5 memory (highly likely)
That means the GT300 would have 50% more bandwidth than a GTX 285, which already has more bandwidth than a 5870. It might be even more than 50% if Nvidia uses newer and faster GDDR5 memory.
The Fermi architecture has some other wonderful optimizations... especially for running at 8x AA with little to no performance hit versus 4x AA.. finally!
I'm really excited about this. Hurry up Nvidia!!!