Next Gen ( Vista, Directx10, Quatro, etc. ) Discussion
Aman
Post anything interesting, cool etc. about next gen products here. I know i made a this same thread yesterday, but it was closed down. I guess i didn't really say it was for discussion too. Anyhow, post any updates and all the stuff here.
To start the thread..
Post what you think is the coolest feature in any of the next gen products.
To start the thread..
Post what you think is the coolest feature in any of the next gen products.
awesome sauce
Anyone know how much memory vista will use up?
Aman
* A modern processor (at least 800MHz1).
* 512 MB of system memory.
* A graphics processor that is DirectX 9 capable.
* 512 MB of system memory.
* A graphics processor that is DirectX 9 capable.
ElinoraNeSangre
A little more detail: http://www.microsoft.com/technet/win.../vistarpc.mspx
I personally suggest something above that minimum however; Vista is coolest if you have all the neat visuals and effects. I guess that's my vote - new Vista visuals. It's definately not *the* best and coolest thing about Vista, but it's the first thing that a person sees that makes you think, "Toto, we're not in XP anymore."
If you're curious about your current machine, you can run the upgrade advisior (http://www.microsoft.com/windowsvist...r/default.mspx) and get an idea of what will work and what won't.
I personally suggest something above that minimum however; Vista is coolest if you have all the neat visuals and effects. I guess that's my vote - new Vista visuals. It's definately not *the* best and coolest thing about Vista, but it's the first thing that a person sees that makes you think, "Toto, we're not in XP anymore."
If you're curious about your current machine, you can run the upgrade advisior (http://www.microsoft.com/windowsvist...r/default.mspx) and get an idea of what will work and what won't.
ElinoraNeSangre
Oh, and coolest feature in other things... I went looking last night at 64-bit dual-core procs the other night, and all I can say is :: grabby ::. The new procs out look like they are going to kick serious butt.
Aman
i heard intel's new core duo extreme 2.9 ghx processors.
What eaxctly is it?
like 2 procesors or something?
and are there any better ones coming out anytime soon?
What eaxctly is it?
like 2 procesors or something?
and are there any better ones coming out anytime soon?
Ghozer
im already running an AMD 64, X2 (dual core) on Windows Vista x64 - RC1 - and i must say, its quick
Aman
i heard intel's got the best processor, at the moment.
Wrath Of Dragons
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aman
i heard intel's new core duo extreme 2.9 ghx processors.
What eaxctly is it? like 2 procesors or something? and are there any better ones coming out anytime soon? |
Ghozer
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aman
i heard intel's got the best processor, at the moment.
|
seems you need to get a new source of information
bizarresk
Intel DOES have the fastest processors at the moment. Core 2 Duo, no chance for AMD
Aman
Yeah you should check your source. :\
Bane of Worlds
the fastest processor speed in terms of Ghz doesn't matter if the structure of the processor is inefficient which is why AMD processors performs better in most critical operations despite the lower processor speed compared to Intel's chips.
I would say for the gamers, they should go for the premium edition of Vista or the Ultimate if you want the best.
I would say for the gamers, they should go for the premium edition of Vista or the Ultimate if you want the best.
iliketoeat
um, u guys do realize that the $400 core 2 duo kicks the shit out of the FX-62, right?
Ghozer
the FX-62 isnt the best CPU, no, but you also have to take into account the memory bandwidth and various things,
get an AMD X2 4800+ on an M2 Chipset with DDR2 633Mhz or whatever it is...
and get an Intel Core Duo with the same ram, the AMD will give better performance over the majority of applications and games...
get an AMD X2 4800+ on an M2 Chipset with DDR2 633Mhz or whatever it is...
and get an Intel Core Duo with the same ram, the AMD will give better performance over the majority of applications and games...
Omega X
Quote:
Originally Posted by iliketoeat
um, u guys do realize that the $400 core 2 duo kicks the shit out of the FX-62, right?
|
And watch your language.
Serafita Kayin
Ghozer, I wish that were still true.
An E6300 will tear hell on an FX-62 now. They dropped the NetBurst architecture, raised IPC, and threw a huge monkey wrench in the works by tacking on 4MB of L2 cache, shared between the cores dynamically with no performance hit. It's a gamer's wet dream, and an overclocker's as well, as these will often hit 4 GHz with little extra cooling. The trick AMD has now is pricing, but the K8L will be hitting soon, and it's got some fun features as well...
BTW, if that's not enough for you, Intel's Core 2 Quadro is out in November. 4 cores. Yah.
Gimme a sec to get the house clean and settled, and I'll tell you all I can that's not under NDA...
An E6300 will tear hell on an FX-62 now. They dropped the NetBurst architecture, raised IPC, and threw a huge monkey wrench in the works by tacking on 4MB of L2 cache, shared between the cores dynamically with no performance hit. It's a gamer's wet dream, and an overclocker's as well, as these will often hit 4 GHz with little extra cooling. The trick AMD has now is pricing, but the K8L will be hitting soon, and it's got some fun features as well...
BTW, if that's not enough for you, Intel's Core 2 Quadro is out in November. 4 cores. Yah.
Gimme a sec to get the house clean and settled, and I'll tell you all I can that's not under NDA...
Aman
Sweet with my new comp im getting a 4gb l2 cache ram
and this one kid next door says his sony will be better than my alienware
He has 256mb graphic card to run guild wars and that's all
and i have dual 500 something mb graphic card with SLI
all he is saying is i got free upgrades ohh i got free upgrades..
He says that they got a thing that gives them free upgrades for 3 years which id no't believe..
and this one kid next door says his sony will be better than my alienware
He has 256mb graphic card to run guild wars and that's all
and i have dual 500 something mb graphic card with SLI
all he is saying is i got free upgrades ohh i got free upgrades..
He says that they got a thing that gives them free upgrades for 3 years which id no't believe..
ElinoraNeSangre
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ghozer
im already running an AMD 64, X2 (dual core) on Windows Vista x64 - RC1 - and i must say, its quick
|
Ghozer
Quote:
Originally Posted by Serafita Kayin
Ghozer, I wish that were still true.
An E6300 will tear hell on an FX-62 now. They dropped the NetBurst architecture, raised IPC, and threw a huge monkey wrench in the works by tacking on 4MB of L2 cache, shared between the cores dynamically with no performance hit. It's a gamer's wet dream, and an overclocker's as well, as these will often hit 4 GHz with little extra cooling. The trick AMD has now is pricing, but the K8L will be hitting soon, and it's got some fun features as well... BTW, if that's not enough for you, Intel's Core 2 Quadro is out in November. 4 cores. Yah. Gimme a sec to get the house clean and settled, and I'll tell you all I can that's not under NDA... |
Josh
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ghozer
the FX-62 isnt the best CPU, no, but you also have to take into account the memory bandwidth and various things,
get an AMD X2 4800+ on an M2 Chipset with DDR2 633Mhz or whatever it is... and get an Intel Core Duo with the same ram, the AMD will give better performance over the majority of applications and games... |
Aman
How about this
we compare everything on
4GB DDR2 Performance SDRAM at 800MHz - 4 x 1024MB and Dual 512MB NVIDIA® GeForce™ 7950 GT - SLI Enabled
we compare everything on
4GB DDR2 Performance SDRAM at 800MHz - 4 x 1024MB and Dual 512MB NVIDIA® GeForce™ 7950 GT - SLI Enabled
iliketoeat
core 2 duo > athlon > core duo > pentium d
TreeDude
Yeah the brand new Core 2 Duos are beating the Athlon AM2s in nearly everything. So much, that I'm even going to go Intel soon. You can think that the Athlons are better all you want, but your still wrong.
EternalTempest
Quote:
Originally Posted by iliketoeat
core 2 duo > athlon > core duo > pentium d
|
I'm a big fan of Amd but I go with the best price / performance ratio when going with a new pc within my budget.
The Next battle (at least with cpu's) will be Quad Core Cpu's will do and which can do it better Amd/Intel.
Also Duo core video cards may take off (2 cards will give you 4 gpu's... that won't be used effectively for some time).
Also "Physics" processing aka a stand alone card or using spare processing of he video cards gpu should take off as well.
Ghozer
Quote:
Originally Posted by EternalTempest
Also "Physics" processing aka a stand alone card or using spare processing of he video cards gpu should take off as well.
|
Meols Green
I hear AMD are coming out with a kickass Quad Core this year... *drool*
Even if Intel offered the best price/performance, i'd STILL stick with AMD.. i dispise intel (yeah, ive had more than enough problems in the past..)
I believe the PhysX cards are useless right now as only one or two games use it (Most use Havok i believe? correct me if im wrong)
Quad SLI looks damn sexy (Even though when i upgrade im going back to ATi) two GX2's is hard to resists though i must say. I prefer ATi though as they had the tray tools which was a dream for overclocking
Oh, while im on the subject, if anyone could help me out with one simple thing id like a little Q answered; If i OC my BFG 7800GS with a lifetime warranty a little bit (say from 400 ->450 core) would i void the warranty? Thanks
Even if Intel offered the best price/performance, i'd STILL stick with AMD.. i dispise intel (yeah, ive had more than enough problems in the past..)
I believe the PhysX cards are useless right now as only one or two games use it (Most use Havok i believe? correct me if im wrong)
Quad SLI looks damn sexy (Even though when i upgrade im going back to ATi) two GX2's is hard to resists though i must say. I prefer ATi though as they had the tray tools which was a dream for overclocking
Oh, while im on the subject, if anyone could help me out with one simple thing id like a little Q answered; If i OC my BFG 7800GS with a lifetime warranty a little bit (say from 400 ->450 core) would i void the warranty? Thanks
gabrial heart
I won't perpetuate the arguement over which chip manufacture builds a faster chip, as they are pretty equal in most cases, depending on what you're looking to run on it. In gaming performance (these are the most current bench-tests running with optimal boards) Intel has a slight margin, but not big enough to say they are superior, where they suffer more in video editing, photoshop benchmarks over an AMD comparable.
We have 3 quads on-hand currently, one from AMD, 2 from intel. They both will require board upgrades and they both are fairly solid performers. We also are running an intel dual-quadcore (8 proccessors in a sense) mac with these chips and the perfomance is steller.
It's hard to say how strong WinVista will be, it's still pretty buggy with RC1 and does not run in directx 10 full without forcing the SDK inside any of the gaming apps, nor do any offer a release thus far to test. So directx 10 has some major on-paper advantages, but it will need to prove itself in real world testing. I'm running Vista RC1 on a dual core 915 with a 1.5 gigs of RAM and it's nice and spunky, even as many of the drivers are randomly bugged. I'm far from running top-end machines at home and am still getting a 4.5-5.0 in the performance tests, so i imagine it could be even spunkier. All the test machines here at work are running stripped down versions of XP pro.
As far as vid cards, we recently (within days) received the lastest offerings from ATI and Nvidia, dual Crossfire/SLI cards on a single slot, offering the ability to run 4 GPUs at once. Preliminary tests are showning that ATI is still the speed champ, but time will tell.
We have 3 quads on-hand currently, one from AMD, 2 from intel. They both will require board upgrades and they both are fairly solid performers. We also are running an intel dual-quadcore (8 proccessors in a sense) mac with these chips and the perfomance is steller.
It's hard to say how strong WinVista will be, it's still pretty buggy with RC1 and does not run in directx 10 full without forcing the SDK inside any of the gaming apps, nor do any offer a release thus far to test. So directx 10 has some major on-paper advantages, but it will need to prove itself in real world testing. I'm running Vista RC1 on a dual core 915 with a 1.5 gigs of RAM and it's nice and spunky, even as many of the drivers are randomly bugged. I'm far from running top-end machines at home and am still getting a 4.5-5.0 in the performance tests, so i imagine it could be even spunkier. All the test machines here at work are running stripped down versions of XP pro.
As far as vid cards, we recently (within days) received the lastest offerings from ATI and Nvidia, dual Crossfire/SLI cards on a single slot, offering the ability to run 4 GPUs at once. Preliminary tests are showning that ATI is still the speed champ, but time will tell.
Ghozer
Quote:
Originally Posted by Meols Green
I hear AMD are coming out with a kickass Quad Core this year... *drool*
Even if Intel offered the best price/performance, i'd STILL stick with AMD.. i dispise intel (yeah, ive had more than enough problems in the past..) I believe the PhysX cards are useless right now as only one or two games use it (Most use Havok i believe? correct me if im wrong) Quad SLI looks damn sexy (Even though when i upgrade im going back to ATi) two GX2's is hard to resists though i must say. I prefer ATi though as they had the tray tools which was a dream for overclocking Oh, while im on the subject, if anyone could help me out with one simple thing id like a little Q answered; If i OC my BFG 7800GS with a lifetime warranty a little bit (say from 400 ->450 core) would i void the warranty? Thanks |
besides, the performance gain from 400-450 will be pointless, you may gain the off 1 fps here and there, but its not worth it in the long run..
The Ice Master
I'm running vista, and idling with just trillian, firefox, and music playing I'm running at: 13-25% of an AMD64 3700+ processor, and 604 MB of ram. So really if you're looking at a new computer, Id go ahead and make sure you have at least 1024 mb of ram, a dual core processor (preferably the intel core 2 duos because of their cost effectiveness), and a good video card. Also, buy it about a month after vista comes out and you have DX10 hardware in there too and most vista security-related bugs are sorted out..
=HT=Ingram
since Directx 10 is Vista ONLY, I am terribly worried that GW a game whose engine has already been updated for the latest Directx from launch will suddenly cause all their previous chapters system requirements to jump to Requires Windows Vista by going to directx 10.
I just hope that the switches still work to play the game on directx 9 as it does now for directx 8. cause I personally know for a fact there is going to be a large populace that will NOT be buying Vista because it is by far too expensive to be worth the bother unless they are getting a new machine so they get it at the OEM discounted prices.
I have tested GW on Vista RC1 and it works fine... but of course that is using DX9... Please don't change it overall anet. This would be disastrous in my opinion. Vista is at least two years away from market saturation and becoming reasonable in price for the equivalent of windows 2000 functionality in the OS (as far as networking, and User and security options). In other words Home version are hardly worth anything to a power user and they will not be happy with less then ultimate in most cases... and the fact is that is too expensive...
Microsoft made the same mistakes with XP home and pro. Home was garbage with many many thing missing from the OS that are required for a power user. now they are doing the same to Vista saying its a benefit when in reality it has nothing to do with anything except extorting more money out of people that KNOW how to use a computer and give the barest of min to those that do not have a clue.
I just hope that the switches still work to play the game on directx 9 as it does now for directx 8. cause I personally know for a fact there is going to be a large populace that will NOT be buying Vista because it is by far too expensive to be worth the bother unless they are getting a new machine so they get it at the OEM discounted prices.
I have tested GW on Vista RC1 and it works fine... but of course that is using DX9... Please don't change it overall anet. This would be disastrous in my opinion. Vista is at least two years away from market saturation and becoming reasonable in price for the equivalent of windows 2000 functionality in the OS (as far as networking, and User and security options). In other words Home version are hardly worth anything to a power user and they will not be happy with less then ultimate in most cases... and the fact is that is too expensive...
Microsoft made the same mistakes with XP home and pro. Home was garbage with many many thing missing from the OS that are required for a power user. now they are doing the same to Vista saying its a benefit when in reality it has nothing to do with anything except extorting more money out of people that KNOW how to use a computer and give the barest of min to those that do not have a clue.
The Ice Master
Quote:
Originally Posted by =HT=Ingram
since Directx 10 is Vista ONLY, I am teribally worried that GW a game whose engine has already been updated for the latest Directx from launch will suddenly cause all their pervious chapters system requirements to jump to Requires Windows Vista by going to directx 10.
|
Serafita Kayin
BFG's warranty covers overclocking, so far as you don't blow it to hell.
GW will be fine on Vista-I'm typing from it now.
There's a lot of hype and speculation going on in here.
DX10-for now, forget it exists. The cards keep getting pushed back, and while they certainly are spectacular, they're most likely 4-5 months off (Anything much further and I'm bound by NDA) and could be pushed yet further.
DX10 will be incredible, but the hardware has a MAJOR change in functionality to accomodate the new engines. There are no pixel or vertex shaders, they are "unified" shaders that can be whatever they need to be at that point, and can switch on the fly. The technology to do that is rather complex, and will be Vista-only, but that's honestly not a bad thing.
Right now, if you want to make a good upgrade, the best thing to do is pull yourself to 2 GB of RAM. That's what we use here in my shop as well as at home (considering they're both the same place, of sorts) and it is the single biggest factor in general smoothness and usability. Next would be a dual-core processor, after that video card (third in line, not first) and after that, start looking at power, airflow, and storage systems. Building an awesome Core 2 Duo system and saddling it with a generic power supply, a cramped, poorly ventilated case, and a slow PATA drive (which not all of them can even take anymore) will lower usability greatly and can put your components at risk.
The next-gen stuff (K8L, Woodcrest, Kentsfield, DX10) are all well and good, but the truth is that they are still only as good as the infrastructure they are based on. Don't think slapping any of these parts by themselves in a machine will make it a magic go-fast box from the far future. Read the review setups-it's about the total machine, and not just the sum total of its parts.
My future wish list involves a K8L for my current board, a replacement for my Elpida D9 fatbodies in a 4x1GB config, and watercooling. Past that, I'm not too arsed about the new stuff. Would like a faster card, but this one is loud enough, thank you very much.
GW will be fine on Vista-I'm typing from it now.
There's a lot of hype and speculation going on in here.
DX10-for now, forget it exists. The cards keep getting pushed back, and while they certainly are spectacular, they're most likely 4-5 months off (Anything much further and I'm bound by NDA) and could be pushed yet further.
DX10 will be incredible, but the hardware has a MAJOR change in functionality to accomodate the new engines. There are no pixel or vertex shaders, they are "unified" shaders that can be whatever they need to be at that point, and can switch on the fly. The technology to do that is rather complex, and will be Vista-only, but that's honestly not a bad thing.
Right now, if you want to make a good upgrade, the best thing to do is pull yourself to 2 GB of RAM. That's what we use here in my shop as well as at home (considering they're both the same place, of sorts) and it is the single biggest factor in general smoothness and usability. Next would be a dual-core processor, after that video card (third in line, not first) and after that, start looking at power, airflow, and storage systems. Building an awesome Core 2 Duo system and saddling it with a generic power supply, a cramped, poorly ventilated case, and a slow PATA drive (which not all of them can even take anymore) will lower usability greatly and can put your components at risk.
The next-gen stuff (K8L, Woodcrest, Kentsfield, DX10) are all well and good, but the truth is that they are still only as good as the infrastructure they are based on. Don't think slapping any of these parts by themselves in a machine will make it a magic go-fast box from the far future. Read the review setups-it's about the total machine, and not just the sum total of its parts.
My future wish list involves a K8L for my current board, a replacement for my Elpida D9 fatbodies in a 4x1GB config, and watercooling. Past that, I'm not too arsed about the new stuff. Would like a faster card, but this one is loud enough, thank you very much.
Beomagi
This game does NOT need a powerful system. Any recent proc, even old cards run this game beautifully. My laptop runs this fine - 1.6GHz turion x2, ati 1150 (x300) graphics. It can run maxed at 1280x800 and I wont notice any skipping - it's a fantastic engine. Compared to my desktop, it's nothing, And i'm saying that to explain that the laptop isn't good because i'm used to low end crap, but because it is capable enough to run this game smoothly. My desktop is a pentium D at 4.51GHz with x1900xt flashed to x1900xtx @ 700//1600. Both have 2 GB of memory, so i really can't say how this game runs with low memory.
As for architectures, netburst - pentium 4 and pentium D is dead. The only reason to buy it now, is to save on costs while prepping for core 2 duo (not core duo) or core 2 quadro (aka kentsfield).
The new architecture is NOT the same as the old pentium 4's and dual core (think 2 cpus) pentium D. Its a rework of core duo, which was a rework of the pentium-M - a pentium 3 derivative, using some tweaks from pentium 4's line - e.g. micro ops fusion, branch prediction.
If you want to test on vista, here's the link to download the public RC
http://download.windowsvista.com/pre...nload-5728.htm
Now dont get me wrong - even if you're stuck on single core pentium 4's above 3.0GHz, or 754 athlon 64's you'd be fine for most games. Games today put FAR more pressure on the videocard than before. There's some exceptions, but it's not a lot.
Any engine implementing dx10 can use a switch to implement lower direct x levels.
anthlon x2 and the original core duo were scary close. Look at laptop benches and you'd see it. You dont feel the difference, but doing long encoding, or gaming (since the pentium M it's been established as a gaming chip) there's a bit o difference.
AMD's quad cores would be towards servers. Expect 2x2 or 2 dual core chips in a package for regular consumers (though this means consumers need a dual core 1207 socket f server board...)
Not always possible.
1. sli wont work on all boards
2. The top single cards are the 7950GX2 and x1950xtx. However, the 7950GX2 is not compatible with all motherboards, because the motherboards need to be able to handle the pci-e lane switching mechanism the 7960GX2 uses to control 2 cards. Nvidia's top single card after this - the 7900GTX is actually faster in most games than 7950GX2 with using 2 in sli, though, at 8xAA the 7950GX2 overtakes it.
3. you cannot run 4GB of ram on xp. XP uses 32 bit memory mapping and PAE(physical address extension), although for anything other than enterprise server, PAE is just used for data execution prevention, leaving the addressable limit as 4GB. The problem is, every device's memory is mapped to the same 4 billion addresses xp can use - so if you're using 512MB graphics cards, and a 256MB xfi, you're already down to 2.75GB addressable space.
you can try 64 bit windows, but drivers for 64bit are not nearly as mature.
Memory space is going to be the most immediate difference a 64 bit os will make. 2GB is getting common enough to look ahead.
As for naysayers on core 2's dominance, the e6600 topples the fx-62 in most areas, including games.
DX10's unified shader architecture, CAN be implemented on current designs. instead of moving data through a pipeline - to textures, then vertex shading, then pixel shading then raster, permitting data to move back to the previous stages of the pieline. This is nvidia's approach (and the approach of the xbox360 which boasts the features of unified shaders)
As for architectures, netburst - pentium 4 and pentium D is dead. The only reason to buy it now, is to save on costs while prepping for core 2 duo (not core duo) or core 2 quadro (aka kentsfield).
The new architecture is NOT the same as the old pentium 4's and dual core (think 2 cpus) pentium D. Its a rework of core duo, which was a rework of the pentium-M - a pentium 3 derivative, using some tweaks from pentium 4's line - e.g. micro ops fusion, branch prediction.
If you want to test on vista, here's the link to download the public RC
http://download.windowsvista.com/pre...nload-5728.htm
Now dont get me wrong - even if you're stuck on single core pentium 4's above 3.0GHz, or 754 athlon 64's you'd be fine for most games. Games today put FAR more pressure on the videocard than before. There's some exceptions, but it's not a lot.
Any engine implementing dx10 can use a switch to implement lower direct x levels.
anthlon x2 and the original core duo were scary close. Look at laptop benches and you'd see it. You dont feel the difference, but doing long encoding, or gaming (since the pentium M it's been established as a gaming chip) there's a bit o difference.
AMD's quad cores would be towards servers. Expect 2x2 or 2 dual core chips in a package for regular consumers (though this means consumers need a dual core 1207 socket f server board...)
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aman
we compare everything on
4GB DDR2 Performance SDRAM at 800MHz - 4 x 1024MB and Dual 512MB NVIDIA® GeForce™ 7950 GT - SLI Enabled |
1. sli wont work on all boards
2. The top single cards are the 7950GX2 and x1950xtx. However, the 7950GX2 is not compatible with all motherboards, because the motherboards need to be able to handle the pci-e lane switching mechanism the 7960GX2 uses to control 2 cards. Nvidia's top single card after this - the 7900GTX is actually faster in most games than 7950GX2 with using 2 in sli, though, at 8xAA the 7950GX2 overtakes it.
3. you cannot run 4GB of ram on xp. XP uses 32 bit memory mapping and PAE(physical address extension), although for anything other than enterprise server, PAE is just used for data execution prevention, leaving the addressable limit as 4GB. The problem is, every device's memory is mapped to the same 4 billion addresses xp can use - so if you're using 512MB graphics cards, and a 256MB xfi, you're already down to 2.75GB addressable space.
you can try 64 bit windows, but drivers for 64bit are not nearly as mature.
Memory space is going to be the most immediate difference a 64 bit os will make. 2GB is getting common enough to look ahead.
As for naysayers on core 2's dominance, the e6600 topples the fx-62 in most areas, including games.
DX10's unified shader architecture, CAN be implemented on current designs. instead of moving data through a pipeline - to textures, then vertex shading, then pixel shading then raster, permitting data to move back to the previous stages of the pieline. This is nvidia's approach (and the approach of the xbox360 which boasts the features of unified shaders)
Aman
You guys think this is a good pc to handle all the next gen stuff?
directx10 and everything?
Processor: Intel® Core™ 2 Duo Extreme X6800 2.93GHz 4MB Cache 1066MHz FSB
Operating System (Office software not included): Genuine Windows® XP Media Center Edition 2005 with Service Pack 2
Chassis: Alienware® P2 Chassis - Space Black
Chassis Upgrades: Alienware® AlienIce™ 3.0 Video Cooling + AlienFX™ System Lighting + High-Performance Liquid Cooling - Astral Blue
Power Supply: Alienware® 700 Watt Multi-GPU Approved Power Supply
Motherboard: Alienware® Approved NVIDIA nForce 4 SLI Motherboard
Memory: 4GB DDR2 Performance SDRAM at 800MHz - 4 x 1024MB
System Drive: Extreme Performance (RAID 0) - 500GB (2 x 250GB) Serial ATA 3Gb/s 7,200 RPM w/ 2 x 8MB Cache
Storage Drive: Additional Storage Drive - 250GB Serial ATA 3Gb/s 7,200 RPM w/ 8MB Cache
Primary CD ROM/DVD ROM: 16x Dual Layer DVD±R/W Drive
Secondary CD ROM/DVD ROM: 16x Dual Layer DVD±R/W Drive w/LightScribe Technology
Graphics Processor: Dual 512MB NVIDIA® GeForce™ 7950 GT - SLI Enabled
Monitor: Samsung SyncMaster 204B 20.1" 5ms Flat Panel - Black
Sound Card: High Performance 7.1 Audio - Standard
Speakers: Logitech® X-530 5.1 70-Watt Speakers
Keyboard: Alienware® USB Full-Size Keyboard
Mouse: Alienware® Optical 3-Button Mouse with Scroll Wheel
directx10 and everything?
Processor: Intel® Core™ 2 Duo Extreme X6800 2.93GHz 4MB Cache 1066MHz FSB
Operating System (Office software not included): Genuine Windows® XP Media Center Edition 2005 with Service Pack 2
Chassis: Alienware® P2 Chassis - Space Black
Chassis Upgrades: Alienware® AlienIce™ 3.0 Video Cooling + AlienFX™ System Lighting + High-Performance Liquid Cooling - Astral Blue
Power Supply: Alienware® 700 Watt Multi-GPU Approved Power Supply
Motherboard: Alienware® Approved NVIDIA nForce 4 SLI Motherboard
Memory: 4GB DDR2 Performance SDRAM at 800MHz - 4 x 1024MB
System Drive: Extreme Performance (RAID 0) - 500GB (2 x 250GB) Serial ATA 3Gb/s 7,200 RPM w/ 2 x 8MB Cache
Storage Drive: Additional Storage Drive - 250GB Serial ATA 3Gb/s 7,200 RPM w/ 8MB Cache
Primary CD ROM/DVD ROM: 16x Dual Layer DVD±R/W Drive
Secondary CD ROM/DVD ROM: 16x Dual Layer DVD±R/W Drive w/LightScribe Technology
Graphics Processor: Dual 512MB NVIDIA® GeForce™ 7950 GT - SLI Enabled
Monitor: Samsung SyncMaster 204B 20.1" 5ms Flat Panel - Black
Sound Card: High Performance 7.1 Audio - Standard
Speakers: Logitech® X-530 5.1 70-Watt Speakers
Keyboard: Alienware® USB Full-Size Keyboard
Mouse: Alienware® Optical 3-Button Mouse with Scroll Wheel
bizarresk
u will need a freakin nuclear power plant for that baby
Ghozer
Alienware - pfft! Over Priced POS's.. You could build the same machine yourself ,for quite a bit cheaper, Save yourself some $$ and do it that way....
and personally I dont like intel or nVidia.
and you should use Raid 5 or 5,0.. NOT Jsut raid 0, because if one of your drives die, you loose everything ( as it is spanned over both drives, nothing is complete, you have 1/2 on each drive) i learned that the hard way..
Also, why go all-out on everything else, and just get a standard 7.1 Sound Card, go for an SB X-Fi Fatal1ty or something like that...
as for that, why is everyone comparing to the FX-62?? thats not what I was comparing too :\
and personally I dont like intel or nVidia.
and you should use Raid 5 or 5,0.. NOT Jsut raid 0, because if one of your drives die, you loose everything ( as it is spanned over both drives, nothing is complete, you have 1/2 on each drive) i learned that the hard way..
Also, why go all-out on everything else, and just get a standard 7.1 Sound Card, go for an SB X-Fi Fatal1ty or something like that...
Quote:
Originally Posted by Beomagi
As for naysayers on core 2's dominance, the e6600 topples the fx-62 in most areas, including games.
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Beomagi
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aman
You guys think this is a good pc to handle all the next gen stuff?
directx10 and everything? ---insert one of the most expensive pc's seen--- |
You NEED a direct x 10 capable GPU, and vista. No current card can handle dx10, so no pc today will run dx10.
you REALLY don't need a $1000 cpu. Even the lowly e6300 is more than enough. If you're on a mid range or better cpu - not exclusive to core 2 duo mind you - you're pretty much set. Just ensure you have pci-e to upgrade the video card, and 2 GB of ram at least.
You're FAR better off going with a cheaper cpu - say an e6600, and using a 7900GTX or x1950 (or 2!). The 7950GT lies between the 7900gt, and 7900GTX in performance. The x1900xt/xtx/x1950xtx range from a touch slower than the 7900gtx, to a little faster.
Even then the 7950 is a good card, it's just the proportion spent on cpu:gpu should be more on the gpu side for a gaming machine.
Bane of Worlds
That setup is an overkill for this game...
scrinner
A question about AMDS Onboard GPU. Will it be equal to Intels integrated cards? Else i wont be too happy. Also i read in the PCGamer article this is something for much later on, And the two are parterning for servers or something. Ill confirm this when im back at home