The point wasn't to say ATi shouldn't make cards as they see fit, but rather to say that this was a bad move.pushy said:heck, why go to cars, tell me how many Indians own a monitor dat has 2600.*1600 res. monitors? maybe not even handful, does that mean DELL (or any other company) should not make these monitors? :bleh:
Yeah. Definitely.pushy said:btw, if the rumors of nVidia cards are true, then we can expect a price drop on these high ends cards...WIN for us...
asingh said:@comp@ddict:
Thanks for sharing this. What a weapon I must say. Though wondering, that accelerator will pump out a ton of heat. Would that one fan in there be enough...! It would be interesting to see the PCB, without the cooler on that thing.
The card runs at 950MHz for the GPU and 1200MHz for the memory, which promises some serious gaming fun. Furthermore, Gigabyte equipped the card with plenty of features that should cater to the most extreme of the extreme, such as handpicked top components, Prodilizer capacitors that should help the card hit high clocks with ease, Ultra Durable VGA design, voltage read points, etc.
rajan1311 said:Guys, these resolutions you talk about are too low, 5760x1200 (using eyefinity) would get a nice boost with 4GB memory.
CeBIT 2010 tradeshow coverageHere we see the upcoming high-end R587SO. GV-R587SO-1GD running apparently at 1000/5200 MHz. Thus, this is second after MSI series Radeon HD 5870, which promises to work at the core frequency 1 GHz. This video card will appear late March. The PCB uses Gigabyte's Ultra Durable VGA construction which makes use of a PCB with 2 oz copper layer, ferrite core chokes, low RDS (on) MOSFETs, and Japanese solid-state capacitors. The VGA cooler consists of a GPU base from which four copper heat pipes convey heat to aluminum fin blocks cooled by two 90 mm fans.
draglord said:but in my opinion.....its another useless attempt to compete fermi
fermi will crush ATI....for othe time being at least