comp@ddict
Skilled
nVidia beats AMD, AMD releases HD7000, nVidia outs there GTX 800 series!!!!
if you knew english... you would have noticed i mentioned 6870 before posting its link. and even before the 6xxx series came out, it was a myth right?psyph3r said:of course u cant see much difference when the 555be is unlocked because it is literally a 955 with 2 cores locked.
6890 i havent read about anywhere can u post a link, maybe u meant the 69xx series based off cayman cause barts (68xx) is still present in 2 iterations afaik.
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waah u are judging performance on a mythical product. too good. links to 6890 or gtfo
That's twice in this thread i have to tell you to check your facts.
Cant find the link can you , oh wait you troll'ed with a 6870 review link and ran away
probably not.comp@ddict said:BRING IT ONNN... fingers crossed 28nm..
de.das.dude said:if you knew english... you would have noticed i mentioned 6870 before posting its link. and even before the 6xxx series came out, it was a myth right?
lol and sorry i meant 69** HAHA. got messed up in the typo.
no no it's definitely 28nm. Global Foundries is already up to task, they are doing AMD's 32nm SOI and 28nm High-K processes slated Q2-Q3 next year, around the HD7000 time and BULLDOZER, Llano time.Aman27deep said:probably not.
Dude, such cards are already there. Buy any high end card from Nvidia or AMD. It will play "almost" all the games at 60fps. There will always be a handful of exceptions. But, current gen games dont really need that much hardware. If you are a PC Gamer on budget, this has to one of the best times. Relatively powerful hardware is available at not very expensive prices and PC games in India are dirt cheap even on release date. Only problem is when some games never get released for PC at all (like RDR :'( ) and sometimes the ports arent really good performance/control wise.rajuwaste said:What is the use in introducing new series of cards without any major improvement,I just want to know when will we see cards (around 10K price) play almost all the games 60fps average at 1080p / max AA/AF :S
but then why is a 6850 lesser performing card than 5850iGo said:@izzner: It screwed up nothing... technically, the naming scheme is not changed, but shifted.
So...
Instead of *8** (eg. 5800) series, now the *9** (eg. 6900) series will be high-end cards.
Instead of *7** (eg. 5700) series, now the *8** (eg. 6800) series will be mid-end cards.
6990 will be the replacement of 5970 (Dual GPU, Antilles chip).
6970 will be the replacement of 5870 (Cayman XT).
6950 will be the replacement of 5850 (Cayman Pro).
Hope that clears your doubt.
izzner said:logically 5850 is from the 5xxx series & it shud be out performed by the same card from the 6xxx series i.e 6850
iGo in 6850 and 6870 reviews thread said:I'm sort of surprised that nobody is seeing AMD's endgame with the new naming.
There is a very valid and logical reason behind the new naming change for Radeon cards... if you notice, AMD is not going to introduce 6700 series cards, at least none are mentioned in roadmap. But current 5700 cards will still continue. So AMD's Radeon lineup is going to look something like this....
Top end (Dual GPU): Antilles (6990 or 6970X2 probably?)
Top end (Single GPU): Cayman (6970 & 6950 - effectively successor to current 5870 and 5850 respectively)
Mid-high end: Barts (6870 & 6850 - effectively successor to current 5770 and 5750 respectively)
Mid-low end: Juniper (current 5770 and 5750, maybe sometime in future this area will be filled with same generation chips with HD7000 series)
Now the low end spectrum and entry level spectrum is eventually going to die down. Why? what will replace it? Simple... AMD's fusion chips. Top-tier Fusions chips are going to offer you 5600-like performance with on-processor GPU. Onboard GPU's have huge market compared to low-end discreet GPUs and AMD needs the fusion GPUs to align properly with current GPU offerings so the naming change/shift was required to achieve that. I think the new naming convention will come full circle with HD7000 series where all market segments from Top End to Mid-low End will be occupied with same generation chip along with fusion chips also using HD7000 architecture.
While I agree, that for most of the end user this is going to create confusion... and for some folks even bit of disappointment (when they find that 6870 isn't faster than 5870). I think, AMD should have launched the Barts and Cayman SKUs with even smaller time gap but then again from sales perspective AMD would have wanted to 6800/Barts cards to achieve enough sales momentum. Also, probably to generate enough speculations about Cayman's performance. It's a good marketing nevertheless, even if it's slightly deceiving.