NVIDIA GeForce 7800 GS For AGP Launched 126
Spinnerbait writes "Although new system sales with AGP slots are almost non-existent these days
in the consumer desktop space, there is a still a fair aftermarket demand for
upgrades in the retail area where AGP enabled motherboards abound. Although PCI
Express is the mainstay interface for most new cards from graphics giants like
NVIDIA and ATI,
NVIDIA unwrapped a fairly high end card dubbed the
GeForce 7800 GS, in an AGP variant. 16 pixel shaders engines and DX9
SM3.0 graphics compliant hardware in the latest GPU architecture from NVIDIA now
available in AGP."
Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:5, Informative)
Currently they only have Windows XP/2000 drivers for it, but I would imagine that the Linux etc. drivers will be available soon.
Re:Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:1)
Has anyone tried the Solaris drivers with other nVidia cards? I have gotten the Linux ones to work well, but the ones for FreeBSD were problematic. About six months ago I ported some visualization software from aging IRIX systems to Linux for a client. We used an nVidia card (I don't recall the exact model) in an Opteron system, and the acc
Re:Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:2)
Re:Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:1)
Re:Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:2)
Re:Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:4, Informative)
Nvidia has always been good about getting Linux drivers out for desktop parts.
Re:Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:1)
Re:Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:1)
Why would you want such a high end card for a linux box? The only thing that can take full advantage of a card like this is high end gaming. Since there are no such games available for linux, bsd, and soloairs I fail to see the reason you want to put this card in such a box. Are there any graphics applications under linux that would take advantage of it?
I have a nvidia 128MB card in my linux box that I paid 40 bucks for. It's blindingly fast under Xwindows. I would rather buy a modest priced graphic
Re:Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Solaris, Linux, BSD drivers? (Score:3, Informative)
Doom 3, Quake 4, Unreal in its various versions, America's Army are all available for Linux, and, by extension, for FreeBSD at least.
Are there any graphics applications under linux that would take advantage of it?
Blender, Maya come to mind; surely there are others.
Re:High end gaming? (Score:1)
Er, not like Doom 3 or Quake 4 right? Those are not high end games?
Looks like Doom 3 and Quake 4 have been out for a couple of months now. Can these game truly take advantage of this card, or would a cheaper card do just as well? I'm not exactly sure that the existence of these 2 games anyway invalidate my argument. You going to spend 500 bucks to play maybe 80 bucks worth of games?
But instead of games are there any high end applications that you can get for linux that would make use of this card?
Re:High end gaming? (Score:2)
I'd prefer a review that compared it w/ ATI x850 (Score:5, Informative)
Say, like, the one at Anandtech [anandtech.com].
Amazing how different a part can come across in two different review/tests... I mean, Anand still shows it worthy, on the strength of being a little cheaper than the x850, but it is in perspective. The review linked makes it look like an AGP renaissance...
Re:I'd prefer a review that compared it w/ ATI x85 (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I'd prefer a review that compared it w/ ATI x85 (Score:5, Interesting)
But these days desktops are only about 50% of the market, and AMD really has nothing to compete with in the portable market. It's starting to shape up as AMD = desktops and servers; Intel = compact desktops (iMac) and laptops.
The only reason Intel has a presence in the desktop market is Dell. Just wait until Dell gives in; AMD is currently building their new corporate HQ in Austin about 10 miles down the freeway from Dell's in Round Rock (RR is a suburb of Austin.) It's only a matter of time.
Re:I'd prefer a review that compared it w/ ATI x85 (Score:3, Insightful)
AMD is slightly behind, only because they didn't jump to 65nm as fast as Intel. When they do (shortly) by all accounts they should jump right past Intel.
The idea that AMD doesn't have good mobile processors was from 5+ years ago, and wasn't completely true back then anyhow.
Re:I'd prefer a review that compared it w/ ATI x85 (Score:3, Informative)
In desktop gaming AMD generally beats the snot out of Intel - you can see that by reading the CPU testing here [tomshardware.com], so it's no surprise (to me, at least) that high end gamer rigs prefer AMD.
Re:I'd prefer a review that compared it w/ ATI x85 (Score:3, Insightful)
The other factor is what operating systems you intend to use and the motherboard chipset. Gamer rigs are often custom built and therefore gamers
Re:I'd prefer a review that compared it w/ ATI x85 (Score:2)
No, AMD's mobile Athlon-64s were faster as well as lower power than anything Intel had to offer... before the Duo came out. When AMD releases their next generation of chips, you can expect that to be the case once again.
Don't kid yourself (Score:1, Troll)
The performance difference for games is not noticable by human beings.
Re:Don't kid yourself (Score:3, Informative)
You obviously don't play many games. Or at least not ones that require movement and aiming.
The difference between 24 frames per second (FPS) and 60 FPS is enormous, and easily visible. The difference between 60 FPS and 80 FPS (usually corresponding to the monitor's refresh rate) is also noticable if you play enough games. Even if vertical refresh limited, FPS is noticible past 60. Past around 80 fps, the lag becomes indistinguishable for
Re:Don't kid yourself (Score:2)
It's not that video games aren't reasonably playable at 40fps, it's that an average frame length of 1/40th of a second with a 100% standard deviation is really horrible - and a higher end video card will give you frames of 1/60th of a second with a 25% stdev.
Re:Don't kid yourself (Score:2)
The performance difference for games is not noticable by human beings." And you went on to blather on about how something with twice the frame rate is perceivably better. Great point--if AMD produced twice the framerate as intel. They don't. The race isn't nearly that far apart my sad sad little friend.
Re:Don't kid yourself (Score:2)
Click if you want a current example [firingsquad.com] The bottleneck for the higher resolutions is the videocard. You'd see an even larger difference between FPS in CPU intesive games like BF2, and in future games that'll require more processing. Other benchmarks (such as Tom's Hardware's CPU ch
Intel's Advantage over AMD (Score:2)
AMD is slightly behind, only because they didn't jump to 65nm as fast as Intel. When they do (shortly) by all accounts they should jump right past Intel.
That pretty much sums up one of the main two advantages Intel has over AMD - superior process and manufacturing capabilities. Unfortunately for AMD, even as they transition to use 65 nm processes, Intel is about a generation ahead of them, with the first batch 45nm chips due next year. AMD's superior design helps on the desktop front, but they really n
Re:Intel's Advantage over AMD (Score:2)
Ever heard of SOI? Because it seems that Intel hasn't.
That could turn out to be a completely bullshit number on Intel's part... or not. Until they're really being sold, it's just vapor.
That's just nonsense. Intel has a fairly small advantage over AMD with the Core Duo, and tha
Re:Intel's Advantage over AMD (Score:2)
Re:Intel's Advantage over AMD (Score:2)
Not true. Threading of video encoding results in a significant quality loss, and there's no practical way to eliminate that trade-off.
You clearly have never written a video codec...
Re:Intel's Advantage over AMD (Score:2)
That could turn out to be a completely bullshit number on Intel's part... or not. Until they're really being sold, it's just vapor.
Intel and AMD both pull off a process shrink on average once every 2 years. Intel's schedule is usually about a year ahead of AMD's. It's certainly possible that Intel will run into huge problems and fall behind AMD,
Re:I'd prefer a review that compared it w/ ATI x85 (Score:1)
Re:I'd prefer a review that compared it w/ ATI x85 (Score:2)
An nVidia vs nVidia review is useful (Score:2)
The card I'd actually be more interested in comparisons
That AnandTech review is useless (Score:3, Interesting)
To not have an older, usable, nVidia card as a comparison makes the review worthless.
Are you reading the right article? (Score:2)
* ATI Radeon X1900 XTX (PCIe)
* NVIDIA GeForce 7800 GTX 512MB (PCIe)
* NVIDIA GeForce 7800 GT (PCIe)
* NVIDIA GeForce 7800 GS (AGP)
* ATI Radeon X850 XT PE (AGP)
Now, which of those cards is the one you are claiming is "nVidia's previous AGP flagship card"? Because I only see 1 AGP nVidia card, and it is the new one...
Not worth It. (Score:2, Insightful)
-Jar.
Re:Not worth It. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not worth It. (Score:2)
One of the greatest performance problems with graphics cards has always been bandwidth. Current generation PCIe adds a 25% increase in bandwidth over the fastest AGP ports on the market. (AGP 8x). It compares even more favorably with the more common AGP 4x ports.
So as long as you're looking to get maximum performance to run the latest games at their highest quality settings, then
Re:Not worth It. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Not worth It. (Score:2)
Re:Not worth It. (Score:1)
Bullshit. (Score:5, Insightful)
For a great number of reasons my most recent PC ended up with an AGP slot, it's less than 12 months old. This kind of card may just be a worth addition.
Hell, out of a dozen or so associates I can only name one that has a PCIE graphics setup.
Re:Bullshit. (Score:3, Informative)
I'd like to also add that there are pleny of socket 939 boards with AGP, and s939 won't be gone for a while yet, so it is possible to have an up-to-date processor with an AGP slot.
Also socket 754 chips are available upto an A64 3700+, which should be good for most games in the near future. Most socket 754 boards are AGP (although you can get PCI-e ones now).
Re:Bullshit. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not worth It. (Score:3, Interesting)
I agree that newer GPU will continue to require larger and beefier systems to push the data to them (after all gameplay is still handled by the CPU), but you should not discredit them for providing a product that is quite viable.
Wh
Re:Not worth It. (Score:1, Informative)
You mean, a board like this: http://www.asrock.com/product/775Dual-880Pro.htm [asrock.com]
or this, for the AMD crowd: http://www.asrock.com/product/939Dual-SATA2.htm [asrock.com]
Re:Not worth It. (Score:2)
Pre 64bit means a pretty old machine right about now. An Athlon XP would definately be the bottleneck playing games with a Nvidia 7 series card, as would a Pentium IV from the same period.
Re:Not worth It. (Score:2, Insightful)
The best way, I find, as a casual gamer that doesn't need to pay the games at the highest possible resolution, etc. Is to just buy a 100-200 dollar video card every 2-3 years. A mediocre video card can usually play modern games jus
Re:Not worth It. (Score:2)
Just a side note, 2 gigs of ram for any Battlefield 2 player makes a huge difference.
Re:Not worth It. (Score:1)
I now wish would have waited for a cheaper card. (but the 6600 series wasn't announced yet). In the end, I justified the card by me being enganged, so I figured I might not be able to upgrade for a awhile.
I did however play a similar game with m
Re:Not worth It. (Score:2)
The other white meat (Score:2, Informative)
I have an "antique" 700Mhz Athlon machine with an AGP slot...which was "new technology" when I bought/built the machine. It originally had a VooDoo 3 AGP card, then an Nvidia 4200. Has a Radeon 9600XT now. While it's mostly used as an iTunes server these days, I still play Wolfenstein, America's Army, and a ton of other games on it. I get pretty darn good frame rates.
My main box is a "beefy" Athlon 64, 2G
Re:Not worth It. (Score:2)
Then why does everyone see higher benchmark numbers in FPS with this card?
Just because it has AGP does not mean it's not "super beefy"
Hell I used to kick the crap out of the newbies with daddy's money at college showing off their "then new" P4 systems. My lowly old P-III 800 kicked the crap out of theirs at every turn in gaming.
If your bottleneck is not the processor or the interface then you will see a major improvement.
Re:Not worth It. (Score:2)
Bullshit. My three year old HP Desktop with an Nvidia GeForce FX 5200 AGP card gets around 1800 FPS (with the Linux drivers). The Windows drivers seem to perform better, although I haven't tested the actual FPS. I'm going to assume you were exaggerating there.
Why is there such a big push to PCI-E anyways? (Score:1, Interesting)
It's called "planned obsolescence". (Score:2)
Personally, I would like to have some hardware standards that don't change with the seasons. Maybe there is an improvement, but that doesn't mean that the we will see the difference.
Re:Why is there such a big push to PCI-E anyways? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Why is there such a big push to PCI-E anyways? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why is there such a big push to PCI-E anyways? (Score:2)
We started with 8-bit ISA, later expanded to 16-bit ISA slots. Then EISA, MCA and VESA fought for a while (early 90s). PCI came out a bit after VESA (and pushed VESA out of the market). Then in mid-90s, Intel started to talk up the AGP slot as a dedicated graphics port. PCI-X showed up in the late 90s (maybe as late as 2000-2001?) and now PCIe.
I think AGP came out about 2 years a
Re:Why is there such a big push to PCI-E anyways? (Score:1)
I've noticed over time that the price for the AGP card has gone up. Not a lot, but still odd for a video card.
Thank you NVIDIA! (Score:2, Funny)
The times they are a-changin' (Score:1)
I eventually found one seller, and ended up with a decent system. Fortunately, the motherboard has a PCI-Express slot, so the next graphics card I get won't be AGP.
Other reviews/articles (Score:4, Informative)
Anandtech [anandtech.com]
Techreport [techreport.com]
Neoseeker [neoseeker.com]
Re:Other reviews/articles (read the AnandTech ar.) (Score:1)
Re:Other reviews/articles (read the AnandTech ar.) (Score:2)
Anyway, even though I was tempted to buy this card when I first read about it, after some perspective I realized that I should tough it out a year and buy a proper upgrade. I mean, my AGP 6600 GT isn't a performance powerhouse, but it DOES still play games like Fable and Quake 4 acceptably at 102
Cutting-Edge Resolution (Score:2)
Yeah, try and tell that to the headless shrouds I see all the time just wandering the earth aimlessly.
Older tech (Score:1)
Re:Older tech (Score:1)
Lesson
6800 GS anyone? (Score:1)
A link for more reviews and comments (Score:3, Interesting)
Basically this is a ho-hum card at a high price. You can get a PCIe 7800GT + Motherboard bundle from vendors like EVGA for around $350. The 7800GT is a 20 pipeline / 16 ROP card, while the 7800 GS is a 16/8. Its no contest which is faster. You can use your old DDR and CPU with the new MB making it a no brainer to avoid the 7800GS.
Re:A link for more reviews and comments (Score:5, Informative)
I may be mistaken, but those combo deals from EVGA are for Socket 939 Athlon 64 systems. If you don't have a Socket 939 CPU already, then you have to buy a new CPU, which adds about $200 to your price.
Personally, I have been weighing a similar decision for some time. I have a Socket 754 Athlon 64 and an old 9700 AGP card. I have been eyeing the 6800GS AGP as an upgrade, but it costs around $230 while the PCI-E version can be had for about $195. After looking around, I found that you could get a decent Gigabyte-brand S754 PCI-E mainboard for around $65. So I could spend $230 on an AGP card that I won't be able to use if I ever want to upgrade my CPU/Mainboard, or I could spent $260 for a PCI-E version of that card and a PCI-E mainboard for my current CPU. Or a 7800GT for $295 and a PCI-E S754 mainboard for $65 comes out to roughly the price of the 7800GS. Those seem like no-brainers to me, but only because I have a CPU that could be re-used. If you have a socket A or socket 478 CPU, you wouldn't have those options.
Re:A link for more reviews and comments (Score:2)
Re:A link for more reviews and comments (Score:1)
Re:A link for more reviews and comments (Score:1)
Re:A link for more reviews and comments (Score:2)
I looked at that for quite awhile but decided against it. From all of the materials that I have seen it appears that
Re:A link for more reviews and comments (Score:2)
When the memory system has usually been updated, it doesn't make sense to throttle the upgrade by keeping the old, slower memory. When it is all said and done, I think it is generally better to sell the computer and buy or assemble a new one than it is to upgrade the main board because it often means replacing every
Re:A link for more reviews and comments (Score:2)
Generally I would say yes, but there are some cases where it makes sense. In my case I've had a video card for three years and I'm hitting the wall on performance. Normally I
Re:A link for more reviews and comments (Score:2)
Many of the people to whom this would appeal would need to budget for a new CPU as well, right? Or are there a lot of PCIe Athlon XP mother boards?
Never mind having to reinstall everything, as opposed to just sticking in a new card.
Re:A link for more reviews and comments (Score:2)
I have a P4T533 motherboard. How am I supposed to fit the Socket 478 CPU and 232-pin RDRAM into the EVGA card? That's right, I can't. So I would have to buy a new motherboard
How do these compare to the Go line? (Score:2)
1.83ghz Core Duo cpu
1GB RAM
256MB Geforce 7800go GPU
I am VERY happy with the GPU's performance in everything I throw at it. I currently have a Geforce 6600GT in my desktop and might consider upgrading to a card like that after using this laptop. Does anyone know how the performance of the Go parts compares to these?
I have a Athlon XP-2100 as a CPU at home for reference.
Re:How do these compare to the Go line? (Score:1)
Even with the Athlon XP 2100+, you'll see benefits, although lower resolutions it wont look much difference, since its CPU tied, and the 6600GT would be already as well. Its when you turn on features like FSAA and Anisotopic filtering you will see a speed difference, whereas the 6600GT will drop to a lower FPS, the 7800
I wish (Score:2, Interesting)
I originally switched to ATI products because their overlay controls were more intuitive and had a more vibrant overlay.
I hear that nVidias overlay IQ is much better these days, but it'd be nice to know whether their overlay controls had been redesigned.
Nice card...but i dont think ill upgrade. (Score:3, Insightful)
not quite right i think... (Score:2)
Dual DVI support needed (Score:2, Insightful)
EVGA 7800 GS Co Superclock (Score:1)
Too little too late (Score:1)
Nvidia has already lost me as a customer (at least for the time being). I was pretty upset that they nearly dropped all AGP platforms so they c
Re:Too little too late (Score:2)
And quite frankly, the nVidia help and driver support is superiour to ATI.
Re:Too little too late (Score:1)
I'm an nVidia fan, but after scouring NewEgg, Froogle, Amazon, PriceWatcher, and local stores for a decent 6800 series card, and comming up empty handed or seeing $350+ prices, I was a bit dissapointed.
Please don't make 350$ cards with only one DVI. (Score:2, Interesting)
People wanting to run two flat panels on their (AGP) system are going to have one less-than-crisp display, or run a 6600GT.
I'd really like to upgrade off my Ti4800SE, but I want dual DVI.
AGP Bandwidth (Score:2)
I'd like to know if they are justified in upgrading to PCI-E or waiting.
Price? (Score:1)
Nice to see. (Score:3, Interesting)
Recently, I wanted to try BF2, but could not because it requires a full DX9 card, which the GF4 line is not. My problem was, that I only have an AGP slot. And I'm not willing to do the whole mobo/proc upgrade for one game. It's nice to see that Nvidia is still willing to support those of use who don't want to replace everything constantly. When I build myself a new machine, I always try to build-in an upgrade path, so that I can streach my investment out over a longer period.
A different card (Score:2)
A 7800gs is far too powerful, expensive, and won't perform near it's full potential on your system.
Re:A different card (Score:2)
Re:A different card (Score:3, Interesting)
Some people have such a narrow mind set.
Who was talking to you? (Score:2)
In my post i addressed his case specifically, not yours. In your case you'd probably see a higher performance with a ti4600 on many games that are not dx9+. The geforce 5000 line was pretty horrible. It was the one time ati beat them hands down in all pricepoints for almost all games.
In your case, yes i'd buy a 6800 ultra as it would be a massive speedboost.
Doh, should sell my Asus V9999 Ultra Deluxe (Score:2)
I thought I had a collector's item, the fastest AGP video card ever made. No more.
"Back when I had money" I bought an Asus V9999 Ultra Deluxe. Exorbitant price. We're talking multiple arms and multiple legs here. Still, hard to find at that price. I Froogled it and was amazed to see that it is still holding its value! Wow. Very surprising.
Re:Damn (Score:1)
Re:Damn (Score:2)