|
the panacea posted:I'm building a PC for a friend. For 1080 gaming is it worth it to get a 770 if he has the spare change? Or should he rather get a 760 and save for the next gen? movax posted:Mod Note: This thread is for general GPU and videocard discussion, head over to the parts picking megathread if you just need help picking a card to buy. Anyway, I'm not really sure why you'd buy a card now and plan on upgrading within the next several months. Seems like poor value to me.
|
# ? Jul 29, 2014 14:40 |
|
|
# ? Apr 19, 2024 17:36 |
|
the panacea posted:I'm building a PC for a friend. For 1080 gaming is it worth it to get a 770 if he has the spare change? Or should he rather get a 760 and save for the next gen? 760 should be good for now but yeah I'd wait to see the 800 series.
|
# ? Jul 29, 2014 14:42 |
|
beejay posted:Anyway, I'm not really sure why you'd buy a card now and plan on upgrading within the next several months. Seems like poor value to me. Ah sorry wrong thread, then. thanks! wargames posted:760 should be good for now but yeah I'd wait to see the 800 series. Yeah, I told him to wait, but I get the feeling he needs his gaming fix quite soon. Sorry for the derail.
|
# ? Jul 29, 2014 14:49 |
|
beejay posted:RMA it, why would you not RMA it? Turns out I can't RMA it But good news is that bumping memory clock down from 1600 to 1550 has solved all artifacting.
|
# ? Jul 29, 2014 21:09 |
|
Does anybody have experience altering nvidia bios to allow the hardware 1.21v limit? I'm thinking about going for that again (MSI 780ti) but it very weirdly did not work for me the first time despite doing exactly the same thing I've done on other cards, and the flash reported successful. I did just use someone else's bios (skyn3t?) but I'd have no issue doing it myself if it was feasible
|
# ? Jul 29, 2014 21:41 |
|
Goons! What's the ETA on 20nm cards? Is it still around January next year? What's the gooncensus - will AMD & nVidia release new (old) cards before then?
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 02:05 |
|
I dont think there is a real ETA for 20mm. 28mm maxwell should be released late this year
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 03:57 |
|
1gnoirents posted:I dont think there is a real ETA for 20mm. 28mm maxwell should be released
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 07:32 |
|
haha woops. That'd be a big loving chip
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 07:38 |
|
1gnoirents posted:I dont think there is a real ETA for 20mm. 28mm maxwell should be released late this year Don't feel bad, I didn't notice that until that until it was pointed out. I do the same thing with mega/giga/terabytes all the time, referring to the new 3 and 4 GB hard drives and such
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 12:57 |
|
Just for fun: GK110 is a 550 mm2 chip at 28 nm. Scaled up to 28 mm feature size, that's a 550 km2 chip, or nearly exactly the size of Guam, including reefs.
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 14:18 |
|
Factory Factory posted:Just for fun: finally be able to run 4k with a single card
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 14:56 |
|
1gnoirents posted:finally be able to run 4k with a single card 295X2 is fairly good for that, but presumably you mean single GPU
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 15:14 |
|
Factory Factory posted:Just for fun: Watch Dogs would still run like poo poo
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 15:31 |
|
HalloKitty posted:295X2 is fairly good for that, but presumably you mean single GPU I imagined me sitting on top of GuamGPU with a small desk and a single 4k monitor playing Battlefield 4 at 100 fps, with a tsunami going on behind me from the gigantic fan from the cooler
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 15:49 |
|
1gnoirents posted:I imagined me sitting on top of GuamGPU with a small desk and a single 4k monitor playing Battlefield 4 at 100 fps, with a tsunami going on behind me from the gigantic fan from the cooler C'mon you've got free water cooling in the pacific.
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 16:26 |
|
1gnoirents posted:I imagined me sitting on top of GuamGPU with a small desk and a single 4k monitor playing Battlefield 4 at 100 fps, with a tsunami going on behind me from the gigantic fan from the cooler That's not only awesome, but it makes me wonder if one monolithic GPU that was physically enormous and the power of a normal GPU today could have been made 20 years ago. Obviously the resistance through the chip that size would be insane so the heat output would be furnace-like, but if it was cooled with liquid helium or something, the resistance would fall and maybe you could have had the future!
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 16:48 |
|
HalloKitty posted:That's not only awesome, but it makes me wonder if one monolithic GPU that was physically enormous and the power of a normal GPU today could have been made 20 years ago. Obviously the resistance through the chip that size would be insane so the heat output would be furnace-like, but if it was cooled with liquid helium or something, the resistance would fall and maybe you could have had the future! The big problem here is that, as you scale up the size of a transistor, its switching speed slows. This is because electricity is not instant, and it takes time for electrons to move around. The more electrons you are moving to change the state, the longer that state change takes. Switching faster is based on reducing the number of electrons needed through reduced size, or increasing the flow of electrons through increased voltage. You also run into problems with moving information around, as the timing of information moving between elements on a chip is also strictly controlled, and changing the scale changes the timing. Related to that, is that the longer the timing, the less information you can send in any given time period. A larger chip simply could not move enough information around quickly and reliably. In answer to your question, no, it would not be possible to take any modern chip design and make it on an older process, it wouldn't function.
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 17:01 |
|
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 17:12 |
|
HalloKitty posted:That's not only awesome, but it makes me wonder if one monolithic GPU that was physically enormous and the power of a normal GPU today could have been made 20 years ago. Obviously the resistance through the chip that size would be insane so the heat output would be furnace-like, but if it was cooled with liquid helium or something, the resistance would fall and maybe you could have had the future! Not even the most powerful supercomputer in the world 20 years ago made of separate CPUs could touch a modern desktop CPU/GPU. For reference a quad core i7 would perform around equal to the 140 GFLOPS figure in Linpack, Ivy Bridge-E would probably beat it and a high end Xeon would crush it. The 290X/780ti do around 5000 GFLOPS single-precision and in the non-gimped DP versions (aka Titan) over 1000 GFLOPS double-precision. Trying to match just the sheer compute performance of one Titan 20 years ago would likely have required hundreds of megawatts and hundreds of thousands of CPUs. quote:In 1993, Sandia National Laboratories installed an Intel XP/S 140 Paragon super- computer, which claimed the No. 1 position on the June 1994 list. With 3,680 processors, the system ran the Linpack benchmark at 143.40 giGflop/s. It was the first massively parallel processor supercom- puter to be indisputably the fastest system in the world. MaxxBot fucked around with this message at 17:43 on Jul 30, 2014 |
# ? Jul 30, 2014 17:34 |
|
I wish I knew more semiconductor physics. I plugged in a bunch of flagship CPUs, comparing process node (X-axis) vs. top retail SKU clock rate (Y axis). Running that trend line back, which is a statistical no-no but whatever, GuamK110 could be hot-clocked up to 4.1 KHz. About 22 MFLOPS single-precision.
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 18:17 |
|
My fear is that the whole island will become so overly populated with electrons that it will tip over and capsize.
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 18:24 |
|
AMD really missed their chance with Tahiti
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 18:30 |
|
Factory Factory posted:I wish I knew more semiconductor physics. Ooo that would be disappointing, heh beejay posted:My fear is that the whole island will become so overly populated with electrons that it will tip over and capsize. Oh my
|
# ? Jul 30, 2014 18:30 |
|
go3 posted:AMD really missed their chance with Tahiti
|
# ? Jul 31, 2014 07:12 |
|
wargames posted:760 should be good for now but yeah I'd wait to see the 800 series. http://www.hallels.com/articles/3008/20140731/gtx-800-series-release-date-seems-geared-toward-october-2015.htm Hm... Thinking of upgrading to a 770 right now. Can I wait 14 months? Probably not...
|
# ? Aug 1, 2014 15:55 |
|
I dunno what is happening on that website but nvidia is most certainly going to release something before October 2015. The editing on that "article" is good for a laugh though. "What is Hallels?" quote:Hallels.com has been running since 2012 for the purpose of serving the Christian community as a Christian music web portal.
|
# ? Aug 1, 2014 16:03 |
|
Hm. I think I'll get off the internet for a bit.
|
# ? Aug 1, 2014 16:08 |
|
So honest question: Do we eventually get to a resolution point where there's a slight percieved boost in perf because AA / AF and the other little resolution based tweaks no longer become as necessary to run as mathematically detailes/ times per frame?
|
# ? Aug 1, 2014 16:22 |
|
I believe so yes. Super sampling looks incredible ... even though its technically AA itself I think it shows what a raw higher resolution can do. Then again, a lot of AA has "effects" that have nothing to do with the resolution so maybe not
|
# ? Aug 1, 2014 16:25 |
|
Wozbo posted:So honest question: Do we eventually get to a resolution point where there's a slight percieved boost in perf because AA / AF and the other little resolution based tweaks no longer become as necessary to run as mathematically detailes/ times per frame? Yes. If you could render native on a Retina-type HiDPI display, things would be aliased, but the aliasing would be smaller than you could see (in principle - YMMV depending on your eyesight and distance from the display). That said, AF is not AA. Even with perfect rendering with a bajillion times more pixels than you could ever see, you still want anisotropic filtering because it's something totally different and hugely increases visual quality on surfaces that are aren't perfectly perpendicular to the camera (which is pretty much all of them in a game).
|
# ? Aug 1, 2014 16:31 |
|
edit: nevermind i am an idiot
creatine fucked around with this message at 01:43 on Aug 3, 2014 |
# ? Aug 2, 2014 22:44 |
|
The number of GTX 880 rumors seems to be increasing by the day, they seem to be pointing to a late September or October launch at a price under $500. From the specs the performance looks to be slightly above the 780ti and the TDP will likely be somewhat below the current high end cards. http://videocardz.com/51117/exclusive-nvidia-geforce-gtx-880-released-september
|
# ? Aug 3, 2014 19:10 |
|
looking forward to running a 980ti on a 300w power supply.
|
# ? Aug 3, 2014 22:27 |
|
Don Lapre posted:looking forward to running a 980ti on a 300w power supply. Same, I will actually be able to build computers again without total agony because small form factor will be totally feasible without sacrificing performance or requiring anything exotic in the way of case adjustments I bet most people are gravitating towards SFF anyway, but I'm looking forward to being able to get in on it without losing poo poo in the trade.
|
# ? Aug 4, 2014 06:51 |
|
Agreed posted:Same, I will actually be able to build computers again without total agony because small form factor will be totally feasible without sacrificing performance or requiring anything exotic in the way of case adjustments I bet most people are gravitating towards SFF anyway, but I'm looking forward to being able to get in on it without losing poo poo in the trade.
|
# ? Aug 4, 2014 07:08 |
|
I notice Asus has new 6gb gtx780s out. That in itself is boring but they also seem to have used them to debut a new Strix Cooler which they claim is 38% cooler, and is apparently designed to operate in a fanless mode when the GPU is below 65 degrees.
|
# ? Aug 4, 2014 10:55 |
|
On the subject of the 880, videocardz (yeah I know) has quoted the gigabyte marketing guy slating the release of their GTX 800 G1 Gaming series of cards for late September. Rumour are rumours, but this seems almost semi legit.
|
# ? Aug 4, 2014 11:24 |
|
BurritoJustice posted:On the subject of the 880, videocardz (yeah I know) has quoted the gigabyte marketing guy slating the release of their GTX 800 G1 Gaming series of cards for late September. Rumour are rumours, but this seems almost semi legit. Yeah, seems like late September-October it is. Will be really interesting to see how a smaller 880 does against 780ti without the node shrink advantages 580->680 had.
|
# ? Aug 4, 2014 12:47 |
|
|
# ? Apr 19, 2024 17:36 |
|
The Lord Bude posted:I notice Asus has new 6gb gtx780s out. That in itself is boring but they also seem to have used them to debut a new Strix Cooler which they claim is 38% cooler, and is apparently designed to operate in a fanless mode when the GPU is below 65 degrees. Asus has used Strix on a couple other cards, but yeah it does look like a really great cooler.
|
# ? Aug 4, 2014 13:41 |