ATI PCI-Express Devices Revealed 344
JohnQ writes "According to Xbitlabs and AnandTech, the specifications for ATI's newest graphics cards have been revealed. Interesting to note is that all of these next generation video cards will run exclusively on the PEG (PCI-Express x16) interface. This does not bode well for those of us who just paid top dollar for the last generation of AGP cards. Read more about the roadmaps on Anandtech and Xbitlabs"
Cheaper prices (Score:5, Insightful)
But it does bode well for those of us who want cheaper AGP Radeons.
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:5, Insightful)
I actually fail to see why it hurts those of us that did buy the last generation of cards. I needed a video card, this was the best out there (well best bang for the buck) so I bought one. How does this news affect something I did in the past and why would it affect my future? Anyone care to explain?
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:5, Insightful)
To be fair, I disagree with the assessment. If AGP cards become rare, while people hold on to their AGP-supporting motherboards (especially those running Athlon64's), their value is going to rise. At least, it'll rise up to just before the point where it's cheaper for people to get a new mb (and RAM, and CPU) along with their video card.
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:5, Insightful)
This is true anyway. This year's top of the line card will be the low-end "bargain card" in two or three years. Anytime you buy the top-of-the-line anything you have to be aware of that. The only difference in this is that you will need a new motherboard for the new cards. But since these cards aren't available yet, what's the big deal?
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:5, Interesting)
I recently pulled a graphics card out of the trash box at work and we putting it into a test box. A friend laughed and said that he had paid several hundred bucks for that "top end" video card about 4 or 5 years ago, and now it wasn't even worth keeping out of the dumpster; any $30 cheapo would whip it these days.
I also don't see how this hurts buyers of the latest AGP cards. It's not like you won't buy a new card when you build a new machine, anyway; by the time you build a new machine that $500 card will be a lamer POS anyway.
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:3, Insightful)
I still use my old Voodoo3 2000 AGP as my primary Video card. Why? It still works, and in ANY OS! no sense in paying 500$, since the only game I can't play is unreal Tournament 2003( and 2004)...
Yes, any 'Cheapo' could beat the crap out of it, but we don't all have money to trow out the windows...
Ahhh, dammit... I posted offtopic AGAIN....
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, when in the history of PCs has this ever happened? Supply-and-demand breaks down when the word "obselete" creeps into peoples' minds. We're not talking baseball cards, here.
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:3, Insightful)
And I think AGP will still be supported for a while. Evidence? It's still not hard to find PCI video cards half a decade after the standard was supersceeded. They don't stack up against AGP 4x/8x but they are still readily available and I think are still manufactured. The only wrinkle is that PCI is still available on motherboards, IIRC, eventually neither AGP nor PCI will be on PCI-Express boards.
I really don't think the value of
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:2)
at work there is a Dual processor P-III they want to upgrade to the highest speed processor it can take (1ghz) + 2 gig of ram.
it is cheaper to buy a new motherboard (AthlonMP) + 2 processors that are next generation + next gen ram.
it is silly to try and keep older tech running, simply buy new. Besides, if you are going to get that video card, you are going to be using bleeding edge motherboard+processo
Depends on your use... (Score:5, Interesting)
That being said, not being an FPS freak I've found that by the time I'd like to replace the GFX card, there's also lots of other new things on the mobo, new CPU socket, new memory interface/speeds, RAID / SATA / GB LAN / dual LAN / Firewire / USB2 / Bluetooth / WiFi / PCI-X / whatever to justify upgrading the whole machine.
Or, more to the trend, perhaps what you'd really like is to change form factor from ATX to a mirco-ATX or similar, get one of those mini-PCs.
But, if what you do is gaming, judging by the hours some people I know spend, getting the latest GFX card every six months be "reasonable". Just compare it to how much money other people dump into hobbies like cars or skiing or whatever. If you do it all the time, you want some seriously good equipment even though you'll never "recover" the investment.
And for those, it kinda sucks since they'll need a new computer to go with their spanking new GFX card. On the other hand, the AGP slot has been around for a long long time now, going from 1x->2x->4x->8x. Compared to pretty much every other interface, it's hardly surprising that it's time for some design changes.
Kjella
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:2, Insightful)
I really hope that they will keep making new AGP 8x cards for awhile.
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:3, Interesting)
Unless you've got money burning in your pocket, I don't see the need for even a hardcore gamer to constantly jump at the absolute latest & greatest cards as soon as they come out. Although if they do, they should understand that they're paying top dollar each and every time.
Besides, the last I recall, it's not like the AGP 8X is getting overwhelmed, is it? That's not exactly the bottleneck in most systems...
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:3, Insightful)
Your best bet is to research before buying. We've known for a while that AGP is not going to be the fastest option for much longer.
Anyway, for a game box or workstation, there is no need to spend more than $170 for the highest end, basic, motherboard of the day. That'll get you a fine overclocking board with SATA RAID, network card, all the ports you need, etc.
My advice: Ignore marketing, buy what you need, and always tweak your sy
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides, who said computer hardware is an investment?
Re:Cheaper prices (Score:5, Informative)
I guess even the submitter did not RTFA.
How fast? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How fast? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:How fast? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:How fast? (Score:3, Insightful)
Right now, no graphics card can do that even at 1 FPS.
Once graphics cards can produce full motion video quality graphics, I imagine development of graphics cards will somewhat slow until The Next Big Thing becomes known, like virtual reality or something.
There is a definite goal for graphics card makers. They also know that the future of their respective companies is in fact quite limit
Re:How fast? (Score:2, Informative)
It's a shame no one's making Linux games any more
Oh [doom3.com] really [unrealtournament.com]?
Re:How fast? (Score:5, Insightful)
Have you seen accumulation buffer effects actually put to good use on the PC lately?
The other reason faster framerates rule the competitive gaming scene: the difference between 60 frames per second and 24 frames per second is an extra 25 miliseconds of delay between frame updates. For gamers who strive to optimize all paths of I/O, who complain about pings above 50 miliseconds, who go out and buy a fancy new USB mouse to get 125 Hz updates (8 miliseconds), 25 miliseconds added delay is unacceptable.
ATI's GPUs will be available in both PCIe and AGP (Score:2, Informative)
It's also worth noting that all of ATI's GPUs will be available in both PCIe and AGP flavors throughout 2004.
buyers of last-gen AGP cards? (Score:5, Insightful)
People who have the last-gen AGP cards will continue to use them...
Re:buyers of last-gen AGP cards? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:buyers of last-gen AGP cards? (Score:5, Informative)
Check out PCI-SIG [pcisig.com].
great! (Score:5, Funny)
asortyl UT2K4 WILL BE BEGGING FOR MORE hagluhsulg (Score:5, Funny)
Yeaaaahhhhoooo! (Score:2, Funny)
I've been patiently waiting for the release of Thief 3 [thiefgame.com] and/orDoom 3 [doom3.com] before updating my game PC. It looks like the game will be out before the hardware though, but it illustrates that sitting tight will get you more bang for the buck.
Of course when Duke Nukem Forever comes out you could likely buy a Cray machine [cray.com] for $24.95.
Re:Yeaaaahhhhoooo! (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't spend $400+ on a video card for the performance you'll get on a game in a year or two. Spend $200 on a 9700 Pro (or whatever your pref.) for the games you play now. Then spend another $200 in a couple of years for whatever card you need to run your games. Buying top of the line means paying top dollar.
Then again, this is
Re:Yeaaaahhhhoooo! (Score:3, Insightful)
By the time AGP has depreciated, it will be a great time to upgrade. For now, my new KT600 based board will do the job fine for the current line of AGP cards. All together, the upgrade, with new CPU and RAM, only ran me about $400-$500 dollars. I can't imagine paying that amount for a videocard alone, since the performance increase o
Nature of the beast (Score:5, Insightful)
Come again? Why do people consider than advances in technology retroactively negate past purchases? If you bought a nice AGP card yesterday, it will continue to be a nice AGP card today.
Re:Nature of the beast (Score:3, Insightful)
Remember that there are people who always want the lastest technology, and feel that something more advanced on the market makes what they have useless.
I'm not one of these people, I think my Pentium 90 system is suitably advanced technology when it comes to the world of servers for small LANs.
Re:Time is relative... (Score:2, Funny)
sorry, I am a geologist, for me that was yesterday!
For those of you like me... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:For those of you like me... (Score:5, Informative)
PCI, AGP, and ISA are all parallel systems - you have a wire for each data bit.
PCI express uses a VERY high-speed serial bus to carry the data. How high speed? One serial channel will carry more data than a standard 64 bit 66MHz PCI bus.
The advantages to a serial system are:
PCI express *could* allow you to have a computer that has bays that accept anything - hard disk, video card, extra CPU, NIC, whatever, and plug them it without restarting (unless you are running Windows (cheap shot, as I beleive MS is working on fixing that)). It will allow your video card to REALLY have fast access to system RAM, and especially in 64 bit systems, that could be a LOT of system RAM.
Good stuff - I can hardly wait 'til it becomes commonly accepted.
Re:For those of you like me... (Score:2)
# PCI express allows you to gang serial channels for more bandwidth. Video card saturating one channel? Use two.
Now, I'm no EE, but if you're trying to simplify the bus by making it serial instead of parallel, aren't you just reintroducing all of the problems by parallelizing it again? And now making it worse by having to sync the timing on two seperate buses? Just curious, if someone could explain...
Re:For those of you like me... (Score:4, Informative)
But hypertransport is the same in that reagard. Its MUCH easier to run x links a y bits than one link with x*y bits.
For Example, you have your own clock line for every link, so there is no need for temporal coherence between the links. At Ghz-speeds in copper on a pcb, a few millimeters lenght difference would be enough to kill your signal. But of course you cant put the lines to close to each other because of crosstalk, ect.
With multiple seriel busses, you just give every link a big enough fifo at each end and no problems...
Re:For those of you like me... (Score:3, Informative)
As others mentioned, each serial line is independently clocked, so it doesn't matter if the timing gets out of sync. Theoretically, they could even run at different speeds (but practically speaking there'd be no reason to).
Um, no (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Um, no (Score:2)
Hey, remember where you are. This is Slashdot. Of course the author, the poster, nor the readers actually read the article!
The article is just to pad space for more slashboxes.
Re:Um, no (Score:4, Interesting)
1) What are the advantages of PCI(normal 32bit)x66mhz vs AGP?
2) AGP vs PCI-Express?
Because I have seen that the advantage from PCI->AGP is not really THAT great!
Perfect timing.... (Score:2)
PCI-Ex
Win64
iSCSI
A nice trio of technologies that sound like they are maturing together.
Damn, and I just got my Visa paid-off from christmas.
=)
Why? (Score:2)
I can't help but think that this is just a way of keeping hardware development going at ATI. Video cards don't need to be faster than they already are in the midrange and top end. It looks to me like an excuse to sell something different... much like the recent Adobe and Macromedia "upgrades."
-JemRe:Why? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is the next evolution in peripherals. Every slot in your PC will be able to take every sort of device you can think of, including the latest and fastest video card(s). Like the old PCI-only days, but with better-than-AGP speed, across the board.
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:4, Informative)
High-performance graphic cards will require a x16 slot, and most motherboards will only provide one x16, multiple x1 and maybe a couple of x4.
Moreover the PCI-Express specs define power limits. All the Gfx vendors requested (and got) amazingly high power limits for graphic slots. Having two Gfx boards working at the limit would blow past the cooling abilities of most cases. While it will be possible for a PC manufacturer to provide multiple such slots, this will not happen in the value segment and may only be offered at a high cost premium (if at all).
What I am hoping for is for "secondary" cards working from a 4x slot, with limited performance and limited consumption. I could use a (or two) secondary display(s) while using flight simulators (e.g., for auxiliary panels or peripheral vision).
Note also that the PCI-SIG is close to making a decision on "second generation signaling rate". The debate is between 5Gb/s/lane (ie 2 times Gen I) or 6.25Gb/s/lane. A Gen-II 4x slot would provide enough bandwidth to feed a current high-end card.
Re:Why? (Score:3, Insightful)
> already are in the midrange and top end.
That's what they said when 3Dfx built the Voodoo2 back when Quake2's graphics blew everyone away. There will ALWAYS be room at the top. I want a graphics solution that can render full-scene real-time anti-aliased anisotropically-filtered photo-quality scenes across three high-res displays. Even the best cards out there would flat-out choke.
That said, what I think better software needs to be written to take ad
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Why doesn't it bode well???? (Score:5, Insightful)
This just takes us back to the old PCI/AGP days.
No need to spread FUD on the GFX card market - anyone who just paid top dollar will be able to use their top dollar car din their new top dollar PEG capable board for the forseeable future.
What this does herald is the next generation of GFX cards that are coming, but I dont think there
will be much difference between PEG and AGP GFX cards for a while - at least not before the shine on the new FX5950 and 9800's has long worn off.
Standard Slashdot sensationalism (but you gotta love it)
Re:Why doesn't it bode well???? (Score:2, Funny)
And thus, the circle of life is completed.
Re:Why doesn't it bode well???? (Score:2)
Re:Why doesn't it bode well???? (Score:2)
IANAL, YMMV, HAND.
Drivers (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Drivers (Score:5, Informative)
Enable the "radeon" DRI driver in the kernel, use "radeon" in your XF86Config, and all is good. If you want to stick with 2.4, *disable* all DRI support in-kernel, and grab the DRI project R200 drivers.
Re:Drivers (Score:4, Insightful)
They won't ever be supporting the older cores though, since the DRI drivers are quite sufficient. ATI has given programming documentation to the DRI project for this task. In most respects, the DRI drivers work pretty well. I am using them with some of my ATI cards at work.
PCI-E about features (Score:5, Interesting)
PCI-E is about making the video processor useful for more than just dumping graphics data. Modern graphics chips are essentially giant geometry calculators, and could be used for far more than they currently are. Due to the fact that PCI-E allows data to be communicated back to the system after it has been processed on the card, this opens up a whole new realm of possibilities. Many 'glitches' in current rendering techniques should dissapear now that the card can relay what the output looks like back to the game driver, allowing it to make on the fly corrections to the image.
PCI-E is all about features, not performance. It should perform like any other interface really, maybe a couple percent faster due to the increased bandwidth, but nothing major. I doubt games will truly begin to take advantage of it for a couple years. Upgrading right now to get PCI-E is ridiculous, however buying a top of the line AGP card at this juncture is equally ridiculous...
Re:PCI-E about features (Score:5, Informative)
Nope - AGP can go both ways too, this is not a new feature on PCI-Express. PCI-Express is all about replacing PCI and AGP with a common interface.
Using the host processor "to make on the fly corrections to the image" would be madness as you would have to transfer the whole frame buffer off the GFX card to host mem and then back again. An incredible waste of bandwidth when you can do pretty much most things with pixel shaders anyway, without the round trip.Re:PCI-E about features (Score:2)
Even more ridiculous if you consider this; what would you check against? The host processor would then have to also render an image to compare the output of th gpu with, but rendering those images
Re:PCI-E about features (Score:3, Interesting)
Technically you're right, but reality doesn't match design in this case. For just about all AGP and graphics cards implementations, pulling data from the AGP bus just isn't optimized. This is one of the reasons why ATI discontinued Firewire ports on its AIW cards past the 8500.
Re:PCI-E about features (Score:2)
buying a top of the line AGP card at this juncture is equally ridiculous...
Buying top-of-the-line is generally rediculous, period, unless you really do need it. It is best to wait six months after initial release for prices to come down esp. when a replacement comes out, and also for more polished drivers.
It really doesn't affect me, I'll buy what I need and what works for my current syste
Took them a while. (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, I'll be able to achieve this in four years, when I have enough money.. =T
Three screen Quake3, anyone?
Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me get this straight, you're whining about obsolescence in the graphics card market? What planet or cave are you from? Leapfrogging happens...what, at least twice a year? New GPUs, different VRAM technology, faster PCI bus interfaces...it's old news, and by now anyone who buys a top of the line card should full well know it's going to be next week's "1" on the benchmark scales and worth half as much as it was when they bought it.
In fact, anyone who has bought -any- computer components in the last 30 years should know this, including the people who bought Apple Lisas(Helloooo, $6k down the toilet!)
By all means though, don't stop- if you did, the graphics card market would probably implode, as you're no doubt single-handedly funding the R&D efforts, and those of us buying 1-2 'generations' back want to keep seeing the not-so-latest, not-so-greatest drop in price ;-)
I just paid top-dollar for an AGP card... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, I'll wince when I see the same card I bought last week selling in three months for $100 less, but in the end I don't think I'll have a problem sleeping because of it.
AGP/PCI-X is not the most important thing... (Score:4, Interesting)
Does this mean anything for non-gamers? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm just curious.
Re:Does this mean anything for non-gamers? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Does this mean anything for non-gamers? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Does this mean anything for non-gamers? (Score:4, Insightful)
The focus is 3D performance. 2D is limited by motherboard bus speeds and things like that.
A high-performance hardware vector based 2D card might be cool. You know, running display PDF in hardware or something.
Re:Does this mean anything for non-gamers? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Does this mean anything for non-gamers? (Score:2)
You were warned... (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm not sure that this bodes quite as badly for those who just bought an AGP video card. AGP mainboards aren't going to disappear overnight so you'll still have new mainboard upgrade options for at least a year or two.
Call me crazy... (Score:4, Informative)
Regardless of which chip you favor, it's shaping up to be an interesting battle come springtime! (Or more likely summer for those of use that don't get the very first cards direct from the manufacturers.) Can't wait! When these cards get released, I'll finally be able to afford a Radeon 9800XT.
I got screwed (Score:4, Funny)
Now another month later I get this PCI Xpress news. Not to mention my card constantly get spotty graphics and overheat. I run open-cased too.
I am going back to Nvidia.
Re:I got screwed (Score:5, Informative)
You would think that wouldn't you. (Score:3, Informative)
PCI-EXPRESS (Score:3, Interesting)
How do we know this is not just another marketing plot like Intel's statements that sockets were no longer able to advance and we are required to use slot packaging for CPUs?
I propose that this is a way to get you on your next MB upgrade. It comes with a PCI-Express slot instead of AGP, so you have to purchase a new video card to replace your Radeon 9800 that is plenty fast enough.
I have yet to see any real advantages to the consumers for changing to PCI-Express. A small change that is equal to a GPU and Memory speed boost is not enough. The update must be substantial and generation jumping.
AGP doesn't make sense (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:AGP doesn't make sense (Score:5, Informative)
almost ALL Nvidia cards with VGA + DVI do dual head out of the box for $69.00 to $299.00 nothing expensive there... 3 head? easy, just buy a (gasp) PCI card to compliment it.
matrox makes 4-8 head cards that are sub $500.00 which are in the same price ballpark as the go-fast latest shiny video card that also have great 3d.
I suggest you learn about what you are complaining about before you publically complain about it... there are GOBS of goodies for super cheap multi-head.
Re:AGP doesn't make sense (Score:2)
LOL. AGP is now eight times faster than it was when it first came to market. The problem is that on-board GPU memory is more like forty times faster than it was when AGP first came to market... so there's no way that AGP access to system memory could keep up.
Re:AGP doesn't make sense (Score:2)
I knew that dual opteron boards were expensive, but I thought the price was in PCI-X. One can get dual opteron with PCI & AGP for maybe less than half with PCI-X. The only dual opteron boards I see around $200 only have PCI-33/32 that I can tell.
Tyan Thunder K8W runs $450, and that has four memory channels, two PCI-X busses and AGP. Tyan Thunder K8S, very similar board but without AGP, runs $520. Both prices are at Newegg.
I actually think the pric
Bandwidth Schmandwidth (Score:4, Insightful)
More features and possibilities (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:More features and possibilities (Score:4, Insightful)
PCI-E is about performance -- particularly higher bandwidth (scalable) and lower latency. I (and I suspsect you as well) have no idea what you're trying to say with regard to "allows data to be communicated back to the system after it has been processed on the card" (since both PCI and AGP are biderectional as well), but if there's a PCI-E "feature" to herald in addition to performance, it's the cost reduction allowed by the the use of high-speed differential serial links.
If you meant something else, please do explain.
hardly matters (Score:4, Funny)
The big news here seems to be (Score:5, Insightful)
That's great news and its about time. It makes me wonder why I never see GigE ethernet cards and switches in retails outlets though. I've seen GigE NICs as on-board features and I've seen them on-line and the prices look quite reasonable, but I've never seen them in a store yet.
But if boards are going for the big speed upgrade, then it's time for the home networks to step up a notch too.
The cards are cheap, the switches are not... (Score:3, Informative)
So yeah, this machine has GbLan onboard. But I don't have another machine capable, nor a switch. I simply consider it "GbLan ready" for now. When I get a second capable machine, per
Buyer beware (Score:2, Insightful)
PCI-Express == Vector CoProcessor (Score:5, Interesting)
AGP was a hack onto PCI. PCI-Express will give us the symmetric bandwidth we need. Yeah!
Re:PCI-Express == Vector CoProcessor (Score:4, Interesting)
Mmmm....six PCI-E slots = six-node desktop vector supercomputer.
Didn't someone predict that ray tracing will overtake current hardware-hack-rendering in real-time graphics (games, simulations)? With a fast CPU and these co-processors, perhaps this isn't too far away.
Cards don't matter, but chipsets do (Score:5, Informative)
Intel's roadmaps [anandtech.com] reveal that none of their next-gen chipsets will have AGP support.
Similarly, SIS' roadmaps [anandtech.com] reveal that none of their chipsets will have AGP support either. That's for both Intel and AMD processors.
However, VIA's roadmaps [anandtech.com] show support for AGP throughout 2004 for both Intel and AMD processors.
So there's all the major players in the Intel game, and two for AMD. I would theorize that NVidia will go with whatever solution lets them pimp their high-end GPUs most effectively for their next NForce boards, but I don't remember seeing anything official about this. Anyone got a link?
Well.. (Score:3, Interesting)
This does not bode well for those of us who just paid top dollar for the last generation of AGP cards
Maybe you oughta reconsider those hasty purchases. I'm perfectly happy buying 6 month old hardware. Drivers are usually working pretty good by then and I don't lose nearly the amount of money you do on the "brand new" aspect of it all.
I'm still in Hold Mode (Score:3, Interesting)
We have
ATX Redesign ATB? and were seeing new cases
New motherboards will follow that with PCI-X
AMD Possibly giving Intel the smackdown with a long awaited frequency increase (If you dont realize AMD proc's can beat a Intel proc on task basis but not freq based benchmarks.. Match frequencies and you'll blow them out of the water)
Solid State Drives are supposed to pop up here somewhere. Imagine the possibilities!
Of course gaming may force my hand this fall with the new releases of MMORPG's such as WOW since I dont tolerate any lag from my machines in these games unless it's network related. Just hope those Shuttle AMD 64 XPC's come down in price.
AGP was the modern "VESA local bus" (Score:4, Interesting)
I never bought a VESA local bus card either, actually.
Misleading article summary (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want to buy an AGP based motherboard this year, go right ahead. If you're worried about AGP cards going up in price, Fry's is selling 128 MB cards based on the 5200 Nvidia line. with TV out, for $90 or less after rebate. Sure, it's not the latest or greatest, but it's pretty cheap for what you get.
Whining about AGP not being on future boards is like whining about ISA not being available. AGP just no longer will cut it, in the future, for the newest and fastest technologies.
PCI Express+Motherboard integration = Amiga? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:KARMA WHORE ALERT!!! (Score:5, Funny)
I was thinking of going to college for an MCSE, and then I remembered that I already had a lobotomy.