Tom's 46 Video Card Roundup 279
Hoagie writes "Tom's Hardware has posted (12/29) a huge 46 video card roundup. Included are a few generations of nVidia and ATI chipsets. Along with the newcomers/return of XTI, Parhelia, and S3."
A consultant is a person who borrows your watch, tells you what time it is, pockets the watch, and sends you a bill for it.
So? (Score:5, Interesting)
My GeForce2MX (64 MB) runs Max Payne 2 and Tron 2.0 reasonably well. Why should I upgrade?
Re:So? (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the reasons I got an X-Box... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:One of the reasons I got an X-Box... (Score:2)
Let's hope that the increasing sophistication/availability/popularity of console games doesn't decrease what's available for the PC. I don't use my machine for gaming very often, but when I do, it's fun to install, run and modify some of the mods that are out there (TA [rakrent.com], C&C [moddb.com], for example). With console gaming, that wouldn't be possible anymore.
==
PS: Know of any good sites for newbies to Slashcode?
Re:So? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:So? (Score:2)
Don't get me wrong, I'm using a GeForce2Mx400 64MB pci, but if I had the money I'd update. (Personally, its more for having a constant FPS in counterstrike, as I play matches where I need to be able to stand in 3+ smoke grenades and still be able to aim.)
Re:So? (Score:2)
Have you ever seen one of those robosweepers, which you link as "useless technology", work? I have, and it seemed to work rather well (somewhat to my surprise). How is it useless
Wow, 46 video cards at Tom's! (Score:5, Funny)
Prices (Score:4, Insightful)
When will VGA board makers will compete by price, like AMD started to do few years ago and not for hundreds of FPS that no one uses (because they're over humam eyes limits)?
Re:Prices (Score:3, Interesting)
The card that can run it at 300fps, though, stands a better chance of running a new game at an acceptable frame rate than the slower card does. That's the point, really - chances are if you're a gamer, the last card you bought was benchmarked against Q3, so when shopping for a new one, you can do some comparisons based on that. Of course, the system used now is completely different, so you can't really comp
Read the article! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Read the article! (Score:2)
In fact, I was checking pricewatch and his numbers are pretty much on the mark - you could find cheaper no-names, or more expensive top-tier name-brands.
Most casual/avid gamers are very interested in price-performance (e.g. value), so this new metric is very useful. Of course, we gamers had long been able to assess this comparative "value" metric heuristically.
One
Re:Read the article! (Score:2)
Now, as you mentioned, the idea of picking a price point and buying the best card in th
Re:Read the article! (Score:2)
For current generation cards, $100-150 is the sweet spot (the 'mainstream' cards : Radeon 9600 Pro/XT or maybe 9800SE, GeForce FX 5600 & 5700). While you might not be able to get the raw frame rates of the GF4 Ti4200 in old
It's going to piss gamers off (Score:2)
A frame rate limit wont matter. (Score:2)
It's not going to make the game run any different, it'll just cap the max frames at 60. Older cards will still bottom out when there is too much on the screen at the same time, while the more powerful systems will stay parked at 60fps.
Re:It's going to piss gamers off (Score:2)
more detailed effects.
better image quality.
never going below 60 FPS.
Re:Prices (Score:5, Interesting)
They already do. Both nVidia and ATI have high end and low end chipsets, and they're very price competitive. They also segment them for sub-$100, sub-$200, and high-end (for which the price limit keeps going up).
not for hundreds of FPS that no one uses (because they're over humam eyes limits)
I'm sorry you have such poor eyesight. Have you considered seeing a doctor about it? I doubt they can do anything though -- it's probably neurological. Did you stare into the sun as a child?
I wish people would quit spouting out the crap about "above human eye limits". There is no such thing. We don't know what the maximum frame rate that the eye can see is. Don't go talking about movies or TV -- they're not the same. All video capture methods (be it film or digital) capture motion blur, which our brains happily interpret when shown at a somewhat adequate frame rate. But that doesn't help a bit for somethings -- like fast pans (move the camera horizontally). Throw in some vertical definition (like, oh say, a white picket fence) and you'll wind up with a headache because what comes out on video does not look good. It's doubtful that it even looks like a white picket fence.
Games don't render motion blur (3Dfx was working on this when they went tits up, but nobody has revived the work -- it wasn't well received at the time either). They render individual frames with static content. You CAN tell the difference between 30 fps and 60 fps. You can tell the difference between 60 fps and 120 fps too.
And, of course, this doesn't address the minor issue that what the card is rendering still isn't photorealistic. Or truely 3D. When we get to ~300 fps of photorealistic 3D holograms then we can start talking about where to go next.
Hey, go check out the benchmarks for the high end cards on HL2 or people's impressions of Doom3. IIRC, none of the cards were breaking 60 fps in HL2 at 1024x768. And those weren't even in intense firefights.
Re:Prices (Score:2)
Even if the refresh rate is 100hz (!!), you're going to top out at 100fps. If the display is updated 100 times per second, you simply can't display more than 100fps.
Re:Prices (Score:2)
The limit of the human eye does not limit the desire for more frame rates. Any hard gamer can tell you what an extra 30 fps (say... 30-60) can do for their game. Frankly, the higher the frame rate, the more continual the image looks (and hence, more like real life). I agree that after a certian point the mind does not notice anything,
Re:Prices (Score:2)
Fbucks (Score:2, Informative)
But be careful when you type Fbucks!
long in the tooth (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:long in the tooth (Score:2)
Re:long in the tooth (Score:2)
Unfortunatly, I have watched more people fall into this trap than I care to count, they buy into the latest cards when, in
Re:long in the tooth (Score:2)
Considering I got my 4200 from my buddy for $50 when he 'upgraded' to a 5600, I'm sitting fat and happy counting my 'fbucks'.
Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:5, Insightful)
That's what I did. Buying a full machine from a supplier impacted on the price of the LCD screen and the GFX card enough to make it worthwhile. The reason it's a Dell is cos they seem to be the only mainstream supplier that gives you a decent choice over the matter. There's no way I'd ever buy a GFX card for 250 or an LCD for 500, but when I can get them inclusive in a PC for 1000, that's too much of a bargain to pass over.
Generally, I find I can get through a PC every 2-3 years. If I'm buying machines with cutting edge stuff in them, why should I ever need to buy a GFX card upgrade? I'll just wait that extra 6-12 months and upgrade the whole caboodle...
Re:Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:2)
Re:Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:2)
I've built my fair share of PC's for bhoth windows, linux and freebsd and frankly I've got bored of the hassle. yes, you can save money doing so but I'm not a student anymore, I've got a decent job with a decent salary, I don't need to penny pinch anymore and I'm coming to the conclusing that my time is worth more to me than the money I might save by hand making it, esp considering all the hassle you can get.
yes, all the individual bits have their own warranties but that's litt
Re:Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:2)
Antec Sonata quiet case (incredible deal btw)
Extra 120mm case fan
wd 2000jb drive
black NEC 17 inch monitor
ti4600 (ebay, 60 bucks)
Optorite DVD -rw +rw -r +r
Re:Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:2)
that looks like a nice system you've set up there, very nice bu I'm afraid I took the easy (but more expensive) way out and bought an apple which so far I've been very happy with, but then I might add, I'm not a dedicated gamer. I used to pla a few games but the only game I've played with any regularity is angband
dave
Re:Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:5, Insightful)
I'd get distressed by a mere thought of spending thousands for new Dell if I can upgrade a few years old system for 400e or so to a relatively modern beast. That's helluva lot of beer and pizza.
And some people may actually like the very tinkering and tweaking you're so full of.
Re:Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:2)
I used to like the tweaking, but frankly I've gone off it
dave
Re:Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:2)
I rarely get a home-made system to work 'just right' there is always one (usually minor) problem somewhere that won't go away, or shows up every 10~15 reboots
I think a lot of this has to do with the fact that most people who build thier own machines tend to get junk parts. I have a friend who is forever trying to build and upgrade his machine with parts bought at Fry's. Now, not to knock Fry's, but if you walk in there, make sure you have a good clue ab
Re:Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:2)
so can the owners/builders
You can say it was my fault because I don't know how to plug an IDE cable in, but that is just bullshit.
There is a lot more to building a pc than plugging in an ide cable. If that's your understanding of it then it's no wonder your system was flaky.
I have bought many many Dell/HP/Gateway/IBM machines that worked just fine. But If I'm getting something for myself I'm going to put together exactly what I want, not what Dell or Gateway off
Re:Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:2, Informative)
Dell has the power to bulk order graphics cards to thier own specifications. They can say "leave off this IC" or "use this cheaper (ie slower) memory". It is standard practice to do this. They may actually just license the design and have them built by their own fabrication contractors using their modifications to cut costs.
Either way, it is RARELY the same card. You are frequently limited
FEED ME, Seymour! (Score:4, Funny)
I get nearly all my hardware from dumpsters and recycling bins, so the faster you upgrade the better my stuff is.
Re:Why u/g the GX card, just (Score:2)
The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:5, Insightful)
Pricewise, that's not a problem in itself, I don't care if I have a super vidboard for dirt cheap and underuse it, but with all those bells and whistles that I won't use, manufacturers don't release their specs anymore, and so I have to install shitty binary drivers instead of using kernel-compiled ones.
In short, with my old Matrox Millenium, I could do 1600x1200x16 just like I do now, but I didn't have to fight with the nVidia drivers that belch on me each time I change something with libc, modutils or the kernel. And I suppose I could try out 2.6, while with the proprietary driver, I can't.
I reckon there should be a market for sub-$10 basic video cards with open specs, for those who care more about low-cost, driver support and not having headaches to do real work, than playing games.
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
there is a problem with this. they see you buying the 9200 but they don't know why. they probably think you're buying it because it's cheap and this gives them cause to bring out a cheaper version of the bigger cards, still with a proprietry driver. they don't know that the reason you're getting it is because it has OS drivers.
dave
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
Except, downloads of the OS drivers will increase with the purchases if people are buying them solely for that reason.
Marketeers are good at that crap. If the "9200 series" sales increase and the "9200 series drivers" downloads increase in tandem and at a relatively similar rate, they'll put two and two toghether. Whether they'll care is a whole different story.
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
eventually nearly all expansion cards will exist as outboard boxes or built-in motherboard components anyway
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
Then
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
-Your case has a motherboard, which has a processor, RAM, FireWire 400 and 800, USB2, LAN (maybe), and video. Maybe a boot drive as well. The board costs about the same as a new video board does now, dependent on chipset quality.
-audio interfaces, hard disks, optical storage, and any other peripherals connect by FireWire or USB or some other yet-undeveloped bus
-all you external thingies are stackable
As long as you can boot off you
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
But the thing is that those cards are so cheap already that the profit on them must be next to nothing. Making cheaper cards probably wouldn't be cost effectiv
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
Considering that the company would not only have to make the video card, but also support the video card, market them, distribute them, etc., it's hard to imagine that any market could exist for a peripheral card under 10 bucks - people might only pay 10 bucks for them, but it would cost more than 10 bucks to get them into the hands of the consumer. Name me one other peripheral card which is marketed, new, under 10 dollars.
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
You can also just install a good OS... (Score:2)
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:3, Informative)
And the same is probably true for ATI, even though I'm not quite as sure because lack of first hand experience.
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
It's fine for what I do, which is non-3D, non-video, non-graphic-intensive computer work. And I believe most secretaries, lawyers, small biz owners, marketting guy, salesmen
Would you tell m
Re:The problem with this super-duper video boards (Score:2)
If you don't even want that level of performance, there's plenty of $50 motherboards out there that have low-end video chips integrated and perform at a Rage128 level.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Is it me or... (Score:2)
I've got a spare mobo and would like to get some pieces and parts to complete another machine. Of course, this means mildly upgrading my current machine, and then throwing most of the parts I'm currently using (amd2100+xp, GF4ti4200, memory) to the currently unused mobo.
My problem is that I could buy the same parts I bought when I first built my primary machine, and only pay
Re:Is it me or... (Score:4, Interesting)
Recent advances in video card technology may not be blatantly obvious from the gaming side, although certainly the difference between half-life 2 and half-life will make all of that clear.
The real changes are from the programming side. Pixel and vertex shaders allow a programmer to use the hardware in un-foreseen ways, unlike the fixed-pipeline cards of the past. A lot of graphics programming on the fixed pipeline (GF1) came down to playing with parameters that OpenGL or Direct3D would expose to you -- as in how to look up textures, how to transform your geometry, etc. You say the GF2 came out, and it was "boring". In fact, it's the first generation of slightly programmable video hardware, because it supported hardware bump mapping -- a huge feature used by every modern game, although at the time it was still playing with pre-existing settings.
Nowadays (since the geforce3), a programmer can invent his own parameters to tweak -- a huge step. You say things "dissipated" after that -- completely untrue! With every new generation of video card, the vertex and fragment programs can be longer and more complicated. The next-generation games (hl2, doom3) already use all of this technology, and next-generation consoles (xb2, gc2, ps3) will undoubtedly integrate all of it.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Is it me or... (Score:2)
His post was talking about pixel and vertex shaders, which are enabled thanks to the huge advances in the hardware of the video cards. The old cards simply ran through 3d calculations and texture mapping, the new cards are completely programmable, with instructions, registers, etc. -- you run actual programs on them that are used to produce the amazing new effects you see in DX9 games.
If you read up on it a bit,
Re:Is it me or... (Score:2)
And added a lot of new instructions (like conditional statements and looping) and data types that didn't used to be there (like half, single, full, and maybe double-precision floats). There's also some support for 10 or more bits per color channel nowadays.
Laptop Video Cards (Score:5, Interesting)
Obviously, the desktop cards are always going to be ahead of the curve considerably, but does the 4200GO perform similar to the 4200 cards? For everything I do, this seems to be a pretty solid card, but I always wonder what kind of power I am giving up by going to a laptop only setup.
Don't waste your money (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead, money is best sunk in a good set of speakers and monitor -- these things depreciate way less. Along with that $300 graphics card, I also bought a 19" Sony monitor and Klipsch Promedia v400 speakers with my athlon 550 back in dec 99 (yep, still using it!). While that graphics card has long been in the graveyard, the speakers and monitor are still rockin along.
My graphics card, however, was a 2nd rate GeForce2 for about 60 dollars that performs excellently for what I do.
My opinion? Look for a good price gap on graphics cards and processors, and go with something a bit older than the newest. But splurge on the stuff that won't depreciate as quickly.... unless you game 24 hours a day.
Re:Don't waste your money (Score:2)
Greetings,
Re:Don't waste your money (Score:2)
It's really all relative, isn't it ? There are subjective values to things like video quality which cannot just be measured in terms of dollars because they differ from person to person. Some people might only game for an hour a week, but when they do so, they really want to have the best quality video they can.
Who is anyone to say they're "wasting" their money, especially when it is undeniable that the more expensive video cards ARE measurably better in seve
Re:Don't waste your money (Score:2)
The reason monitors and speakers don't depreciate so much is because the technology can't improve very much.
While silicon processes and transistor design might allow for a performance doubling every year or two, that simply doesn't apply to most other industries because it is much easier to max out any particular technology and improvements can only be incremental at best in comparison.
Toms is a stinking sales site anymore (Score:2, Interesting)
P.S. NV3x architectures can't do everything in 8x1 mode [beyond3d.com]. Has to drop to 4 ops/clock with color operations.
Re:Toms is a stinking sales site anymore (Score:2)
The GeforceFX 5800 sucked. It only had a 128-bit memory bus. etc. We all know this.
None of that is true anymore. The 5800 isn't for sale anymore. The 5950 has as much memory bandwidth as ATI's fastest card.
A bit off-subject... (Score:5, Interesting)
MPlayer has XVMC support (with mpeg1/2). That means any videocard, with an XF86 driver that supports XVMC, can now do MPEG1/MPEG2 playback entirely on the card's processor, so no CPU load at all.
NVidia's binary drivers support it on the Geforce4, and Intel 810/815 cards have open source X drivers that support it as well. ATI's driver don't support XVMC just yet, even though the hardware has the capability.
RTFA (Score:2)
Flawed results (Score:5, Interesting)
If you dig a little deeper and follow the link for the Jaton 3DForce4 Ti4600 for $54 you'll find all the retailers listed are actually selling the MX440, a lesser card.
If you follow an $89 link (still a great price) you'll find half.com is offering the PNY Verto GEFORCE4 TI 4600 for that price (according to bizrate). Click the link to half.com and hey! you can get a new one for $319 or a used one for $180. No $89.
While I respect Tom's hardware I think fact checking is a much larger task in these bulk reviews and is something they need to pay a little more attention to.
Matrox (Score:2)
Re:Matrox (Score:3, Informative)
Underappreciated Value Card - Radeon 9800 (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Underappreciated Value Card - Radeon 9800 (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Underappreciated Value Card - Radeon 9800 (Score:2)
And succesfully softmoding one of THOSE gives you a full 9800 Pro for half the price. That's what I'd call a good deal.
Too bad the article didn't mention what version they were testing, doubling the memory bus would probably bring up the scores up somewhat.
I just wish there would be more data about how good is the change of softmod before buying one
Interesting comparison at bottom (Score:2, Interesting)
Newcomer... Prahelia (Score:2, Insightful)
Summary for those with ADHD (Score:5, Funny)
#2) Old cards are cheaper then new cards
#3) Best bang for your buck = older cards
Re:Summary for those with ADHD (Score:2)
ATI 9700 pro (Score:4, Informative)
I first tried the Nvidia GF4-4600 for 199, and it didn't even feel faster(took it back). The ATI 9700 Pro, Ati's main comeback into the game, really was impressive. It was worth every penny (39,900 of em).
Anti-Aliasing was the new kid on the block, and the ATI 9700 pro allowed all games at the time (and most now) with AA turned on. Toms benchmarks shows the ATI 9700 pro still to be in the top 10. With video cards not doubling in speed every 6 months anymore (i miss you 3dfx), I dont expect to see the speeds jump like they use too. This card might just last me another year, and in the last 6 years, thats amazing in gfx card releases.
The only problem I've seen so far, is Nvidia's CG code really messes with ATI's textures and shaders. And with lots of developers loving Nvidia SDK's. ATI has been good to fix most bugs with ever new Catalyst release, but I'm still waiting SecondLife [secondlife.com] to get patched. (Nvidia CG bugs) Such a work horse of an engine (Havok), should be interesting to see Havok2 [havok.com] engine used. (Also used in Max Payne2)
The benchmark had me wondering, why only a P3.2ghz? I'd like to see them also include a High End AMD, and both mid range (2.6hz P4, AMD 2600) to round it out. Always wonder how many more FPS a faster CPU will give me, so I can just if its worth the cost. BTW Save those pics from toms hardware, then you can compare hardware later. I had to search the tomshardware.de for the benchmarks I was looking for 2002.
Hey, lucky they didnt use a P4EE
Re:ATI 9700 pro (Score:2)
Re:ATI 9700 pro - Read a little deeper (Score:2)
Fan Noise (Score:3, Insightful)
DirectX 9 compliant fo' shizzle! (Score:2)
That way your not shooting your whole wad
Figures... the day after you buy the wrong card... (Score:2)
--D
p.s. Anyone offer a guess as to why the 128 performs no better than the 64?
Re:Figures... the day after you buy the wrong card (Score:2)
Then there is the extra overhead of managing twice the memory, which makes some chipsets slower (like the Radeon 8500) in many tests.
Finally, in many systems the system ram and AGP bus is s
Fastest AGP 2x card? (HHOS) (Score:2)
It may seem a bit unusual to ask about fast AGP 2x cards, (especially since we're up to 8x now) but I have an older motherboard and that's the most it'll take :-/. It's an Asus K7M [asus.com] -- one of the first Slot A boards -- and it only supports the AGP 1.0 spec (AGP 1x/2x).
You'd think that AGP would be backwards compatible, but that's doesn't appear to be the case. Due to voltage changes as the spec evolved [ertyu.org], my motherboard will only supply 3.3v (as opposed to 1.5v or even 0.8v of some of the other AGP versions)
My new ATI RADEON 9800 PRO (Score:2, Interesting)
Things to do to reach Nirvana
1.) catalyst 3.10 driver was the best there is, and I had t
Re:My new ATI RADEON 9800 PRO (Score:2)
In fact, I foolishly tried ATI again when building my nephews a new computer during my visit to Florida this Xmas. I picked up an ATI 9600 because it seemed like a good deal compared to the Nvidia's I saw in the stores around there. Plus, I had read so many
How about Linux support? (Score:3, Insightful)
Powerful cards (Score:2)
I just got Halo for the PC. I have an Celeron 2.4ghz machine with an ASUS P4R800-VM (integrated ATI 9100IGP graphics).
It sucks. The VPU supposedly keeps crashing while I try to play it, I get about 3fps at 640x480, and it doesn't LOOK (at least as far as I've been able to get) much better than Half-Life, which can run with SOFTWARE rendering on a Pentium 166mhz machine, 320x240 resolution at ~15fps!
(For th
Re:0 FPS? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:0 FPS? (Score:3, Funny)
You can view gorgeous hi-res truecolor high-quality tiffs at 0 fps
Re:0 FPS? (Score:2)
Re:What I'm sick of (Score:3, Insightful)
I know that when I enable dualhead on my machine, you specify a "primary" monitor for games and overlays (on an nVidia card) and the secondary just blanks on these...
If you want all 4 monitors to have 3d displays on them, then MAYBE the pci bus would be slow for that. However, for what I'd use 4 monitors for (more code windows, more windows of slashdot, more terminals up at once, monitoring networks etc) PCI would be just happy.
Now, finding a deal on m
Re:What I'm sick of (Score:2)
I've seen a setup with three- it's just nice
Re:What I'm sick of (Score:2)
it required one computer per monitor-
I totally forgot until your post, I did this once as a proof of possible to my roomates with one side only..
Re:Are high end cards worth the money? (Score:2)
Re:It's too bad... (Score:2)
I feel you brother, but image quality is more a subjective thing. One card may have brighter colors while another may have smoother anti-aliasing. Whose to choose which one is better? And drivers change often, especially when it's regarding new hardware. Frame rates should always be the primary measuring stick IMO.
Re:Yet another useless video card review (Score:2)