Cheaper Video Cards Compared 126
An unnamed correspondent writes "For those of you that can't afford to spend $600 on a video card (like everyone!) there's a really thorough comparison of different the best 10 value (meaning $150) 3D graphics cards, using chips from Matrox, NVIDIA, 3dfx and ATI. The authors show off benchmarks on an AMD Duron 700 for 3D and then look at DVD as well as 2D."
What's the need? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Radeon a "value" card? (Score:4)
On PriceWatch [pricewatch.com], the GeForce 2 is selling for $169, just $10 more than the ATI Radeon DDR, and $30 more than the Radeon SDR. I don't think the Radeon DDR fits in the "value" range, and the SDR is arguable.
Last I checked, the GeForce 2 is the second fastest card on the market, right behind the GeForce 2 Ultra (which is still insanely expensive).
Oh, and the Voodoo 5 goes for $234. Go figure.
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Page/Content Ratio Low (Score:2)
This article needs more pages. hell, there were some pages that contained multiple paragraphs. I am positive I missed out on some important banner ads on this site by the efficient consolidation of actual information.
Since I couldn't stick around, did they say if any of these work with Linux, or *BSD ?
Re:So ... what about affordable Linux gaming? (Score:3)
I don't know if this counts as "value", but I've got a Voodoo 3 3000 (picked it up for about $150, I think they're less expensive now) and it works flawlessly with XFree 3.3.6 and Q3A.
I've heard the drivers aren't the best, but I haven't had to deal with it - when I switched distros, the new one picked up the card and threw the drivers in for me so I didn't have to set anything up.
not good for all trades (Score:1)
You pansy! I have... NO VIDEO CARD in my Linux box (Score:4)
I've only got 5 slots in my machine. One has a sound card, the other 4 slots have network cards. eth0=static IP #1, eth1=static IP#2, eth2=DHCP addr, eth3=Internal LAN.
If I need a colsole for administration, I can ssh or remote X display one. I can even use a serial port in an emergency.
Sure, I installed a video card to set up the box. After Linux was running, the card was gone.
Video cards are for the weak!
Re:Summary please? (Score:2)
This Page [sharkyextreme.com] sez the winner is the ATI Radeon DDR 32MB card. Although it didn't score _that_ much higher than the others. Just a couple of points.
3dfx, Leadtek, and the MSI card have the best price. The Radeon DDR is the highest in performance.
The lamest cards for performance: The 3dfx and the Matrox G450.
There are 28 pages in total, FYI.
Re:Marketing vs. Necessity (Score:1)
go to pricewatch (Score:2)
It was said above, and the price for a GeForce2 was given.
Pricewatch shows prices for a GeForce with 32 MB for ~$100. That's value. Oh, and it's made by Elsa, who have a 6 year manufacturer's warranty on the entire card, and they include diagnostic software with the drives so you can measure card temp and overclock it easily (and hopefully safely).
Off topic, on pricewatch and AMD Athlon 750 is the same price as a PIII 500.
Moller
High End Boards Overrated (Score:4)
This is why ... (Score:1)
Unfortunately, it does not work with any hardware site, notably Ace Hardware that has good (IMHO) reviews, but you can't fast forward to the conclusion page neither through site navigation nor using the technique described above.
nVidia isn't so bad (Score:1)
nVidia, and John Carmack.
Without them, I guarantee you that Linux would be suffering greatly in the 3D department. DirectX would be the only protocol capable of accessing the newest hardware features, and OpenGL would stagnate. At least with nVidia around, they are actively working to get more of these features supported by OpenGL. You should be thankful for that.
Stop pimping sharkyextreme (Score:1)
Sharkyextremes hardware reviews are very poor please pimp anands, as they actually understand the tech a bit.
This is the 2nd absolutely useless SE article that has made it onto slashdot in the last week.
Cheers
I just took a Calculus test an hour ago (Score:1)
The test I just took was multivariable calculus, half of it on vectors. The cross product of any vector with itself is 0. As far as I know, the generation of a zero is about as fast as it will get already. If you're talking about dot product, there's nothing innovative about x^2+y^2+z^2. The PS2 has a specialized chip that can do 3 dimensional dot products in a single clock cycle. That's a chip design feature, not a mathematical algorithm.
I also have a hard time believing that a CEO would nix a technological leap. Maybe wait until there are other improvements and wait until the next architectural overhaul, but not ditch it. Parabolic polygon? Double-buffering anti-flicker method? Revolutionize the industry? First, I don't see connections. Second, it sounds like you're just tossing around buzz, not to mention the bragging/hinting. You don't sound like someone who has the professionism to rise to the status of lead developer at a major video card company.
Is it worse if you're trolling, or worse if you're serious?
Re:The real budget video card: (Score:1)
Re:Boycot NVIDIA (Score:2)
Are you serious? C'mon! The latest Detonator drivers kick some butt. The team at Nvidia has their collective shit wired. They produce a tight set of drivers for the best consumer level video cards on the market. Other companies have toyed with their own releases and they pale in comparison. (Creative Labs comes to mind, I own a 3D Annihilator, and the switch to the Reference drivers gave me a 15% performance increase) There is nothing wrong with Closed Source Projects, and until the worlds economy adjusts to the dynamic created in an Open Source environment, They will be the "Norm".
Re:Yea you can get a cheap card.. but (Score:1)
Re:You pansy! I have... NO VIDEO CARD in my Linux (Score:2)
Cost of 4 10/100 PCI NICs: $40.
Cost of one 4 head 10/100 NIC: More than I care to think about.
Re: ATi drivers (Score:1)
Back in the day slashdot would of never posted about cards that didn't support X. Now; they do.
Re:Linux gaming: voodoo value (Score:1)
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Re:Try a V3 or V4 PCI (Score:2)
I haven't tried a multiple monitor setup personally, but a friend of mine has one under W2K using a Riva128 AGP plus a V3-2000 PCI, with no problems.
Re:Marketing vs. Necessity (Score:1)
Re:Marketing vs. Necessity (Score:1)
You're happy with your Celeron 500 with a TNT2 right now, but a year from now, when you're only getting 20 FPS on the top (polygon count) games, you won't be...but there will be other "low-end" cards by then. You're not the review's target audience right now. In a year, you will be (except it'll be a different review, with different cards).
Why Spend 150? (Score:1)
Re:Voodoo 4 4500 (Score:1)
I would've considered this a decent post if you hadn't gone troll at the end with that idiotic third point.
Goes to show you... (Score:2)
People don't want to hear this though and that is what the video card manufactures are betting on. Same thing sony is betting on with the PS2, matter of fact it is what the guys auctioning PS2 consoles on ebay for $1K are betting.
I am not saying don't buy it, but think about it this way. if you earn $8 an hour you would have to work for 75 hours to get that card. But if you wait 6 months then you can have it for 25 hours worth of work. So when you see that hot item on the shelf ask yourself this , is that "neat" item worth the 50 extra hours you will have to slave at your crappy job (by definition of the word work all jobs are crappy, otherwise they would be called fun) to have it RIGHT now. If not don't get it, but if see your life comming to an end without it, then get it.
Flawed Review (Score:1)
So ... what about affordable Linux gaming? (Score:4)
I'm only interested in Linux gaming, and I'm not a super-fast speed-freak gamer, and I don't have an infinite budget. These cards look nice, but which ones have Linux drivers, and what versions of XFree86 do they support?
I was pretty happy with my Matrox Millenium G200 card until I tried to load Q3 Arena ... figuring out which drivers to load where and how to configure them was more effort than I could afford. I would like to replace it, but I want something that works with XFree86 3.3.6 and Q3A. Recommendations?
Are you moderating this down because you disagree with it,
Re:What are you talking about? (Score:1)
As long as all the moderators are aware of who "Bob Abooey" is and what he does, and no-body pays any attention to him (no-one mods him up or down), we'll all be fine.
Re:Marketing vs. Necessity (Score:2)
I myself would be very interested in seeing a test of true value cards, including older cards, done on a cost benefit basis.
Anything over $100 bucks is hardly a value card, except with reference to the very cutting edge.
Re:No. Important question is, "Can it do multi hea (Score:1)
But seriously... (Score:2)
I can hear the console gamers laughing.
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Re:Radeon a "value" card? (Score:1)
Geforce 2 MX is the "value" card which I would say is the best bang for the buck. Performance slightly higher than the old Geforce 256 DDR with prices around $130. I'm quite happy with this card.
Geforce 2 GTS is a higher end card with 2 graphic pipelines instead of one. The problem with the latest nVidia chipsets is that they were always bottlenecked by the RAM speed. The Geforce 2 Ultra is the same as the GTS, but it corrects this with its higher speed RAM, but you pay a big premium for this.
(Which also means if you want more graphic performance out of your existing Geforce card, overclock ONLY your RAM to see the best performance boost. You can even buy heatsinks that add more cooling to the graphic chipsets to push it even farther. Just plain crazy.)
Cheaper... not cheap (or cheapest). (Score:1)
So I think $150 is cheap for a card that is on par with today's technology. I think $300 for top of the line is adequate too. You get what you pay for. That $500 for the GeForce2 Ultra is getting what you pay for. Granted, I think I will wait till January so I get it for less.
Cheers.
Re:What's the need? (Score:2)
Since overall system performance increases (because of faster hard drives and wider buses), these tests allow better evaluation of the card itself. Also, stability and driver maturity are rarely an issue for an older card.
One thing that still sucks is that some of these cards are still mostly Windows-only; alternative OS-es don't have drivers for all of them.
Boycot NVIDIA (Score:1)
In my eyes NVIDIA just isnt an option, but the Radeon looks cheap and fast, and ATI supports the principle of open source software.
Even though ATI arent developing open source drivers themselves, they look to be assisting open source efforts.
Better than NVIDIA binary only driver that contains legal threats to Prosecute anyone who tries to reverse engineer an open source NVIDIA driver.
NVIDIA ranks in the same class as microsoft in my book.
Re:Boycot NVIDIA (Score:2)
The answer to this is simple... even an Open Source Zealot on a tight budget likes to play Quake.
Re:You pansy! I have... NO VIDEO CARD in my Linux (Score:1)
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I'm not ashamed. It's the computer age, nerds are in.
They're still in, aren't they?
Re:You pansy! I have... NO VIDEO CARD in my Linux (Score:1)
Cheap VideoCards for Auction at Ubid.com (Score:2)
Well all I am saying is not to go and buy something from there, but when you dont have that much moolah to buy the high end cards, you dont have to settle for a TNT2 or a GeForce for 150 or more from some site like EBay or any of those B2C sites. You just need to know where to look. And in my experience this site has it all. Check it out guys.. And ahem.. it runs on ASP/IIS, so dont flame them for that. All it matters is whether they are able to deliver. Well in my experience, they have done more than that.
my two cents..
Re:ARGH. (Score:1)
Which is why I never bother to go to any Snarky link. It's not worth spending 10 minutes paging thru the Snarky site to get 2 minutes worth of information.
I guess I admire the saint-like patience of the people who do read it though, so I can read the condensed version on /.
Re:go to pricewatch (Score:1)
Re:Marketing vs. Necessity (Score:2)
Games are not equal to first person shooters.
I play N3 a lot, and my V3 maxes it out, and at least until next year this is the newest, hottest racing sim.
So, I would love to see a test that tells me what my best bang for the buck for playing N3 and Age of Empires II is.
Value cards for value games. If you want max frame rate in UT, buy a card that's designed to give you max frame rate in UT, but that won't be a 'value' card.
Re:Best card on the market (Score:1)
The VooDoo5 6000 is the lastest card from 3dfx. Technologically there's nothing much in them..In my opinion the card is an oversized, inefficient(it requires an EXTERNAL POWER SOURCE), expensive piece of crap. It's about on par with the Geforce2s in price, but the Nvidia cards are doing better on the benchmarks.
Then there is the ATI all-in-wonder Radeon 64 Meg DDR. It's framerates are slightly slower than the Geforce, but with it you get built-in hardware MPEG (for DVD) decoder, TV in/out, and a DVD player that takes full advantage of the MPEG decoder. Now you might be saying "wow, the RADEON IS DEFINATELY BETTER!!" But ATI has been known to have REAL shitty drivers on it's new products, so you'd probably have to wait a few months to get it going stabily, but by then the price would have droped by at least 30%...
as for DVD drives, they are all pretty much the same, the question you should be asking yourself is how are you going to play the DVDs. By this I mean hardware Decoder card(either separate or built into a video card) or a software player...
There is more they don't tell you (Score:1)
The real budget video card: (Score:2)
Re:$30 (Score:1)
My Geforce based Prophet (Score:1)
Re:Boycot NVIDIA (Score:1)
I used to be quite happy playing svga-quake with 22FPS on a S3 video card. Should be able to get better than that these days without compromising ones values.
NVIDIA did fight the good fight against 3dfx with opengl/glide, but now the tables have turned, NVIDIA is the one keeping secrets and 3dfx (and others) are the ones opening up and trying to do the right thing.
NVIDIA have said that they cant opensource there drivers becasue they dont have rights to some of the intellectual property. Have stupid is managment at nvidia, without drivers for there hardware their product is totally useless, you would think they would at least be attempting to develop drivers that they do have control of.
We need to support companies that will stand up to NVIDIA, if there isnt competition then all consumers loose.
Glenn
Only 72 FPS??? (Score:1)
Only 72 FPS?? (formatted) (Score:1)
I'm only half kidding, I udnerstand serious Quakeaholocs do this. I've never seen a system running at this rate but I HAVE seen real Showscan (120fps movie) and the effect is astounding. The sense of presance is most like what a CD sounds like the first time you hear one. The film just seems much more real. (So real that the attraction I saw it at pretends you are watching live people and all the reviews I've ever read bought the story hook, line and sinker. If your curious its the "Present" show in the Luxor's "Past, Present and Future" simulation trilogy.)
Re:Goes to show you... (Score:3)
It takes about 100 hours of labour to earn $600 post-tax dollars. That's two and a half weeks of full-time work.
And I'm not even bothering to factor in other paycheque incidentals, like insurance and workers comp and so on. Truth is, once all taxes and so-called "optional" debits are withdrawn from your paycheque, it's probably closer to 120 hours to earn $600 on an $8/hr wage...
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Re:So ... what about affordable Linux gaming? (Score:2)
Are you moderating this down because you disagree with it,
The important question... (Score:1)
Re:Linux gaming: voodoo value (Score:1)
Re:High End Boards Overrated (Score:1)
Just to keep on topic.
I HATE ATI (Score:2)
Re:The real budget video card: (Score:1)
skip the page-by-page bullshit (Score:1)
28 freakin' pages... SharkyExtreme is a joke!
Hardware opensource (Score:1)
Re:You pansy! I have... NO VIDEO CARD in my Linux (Score:2)
Wait, that's my typewriter...
Re:So ... what about affordable Linux gaming? (Score:1)
My advice for the simplest way to go is this. Get the G200 working. If it's still not fast enough for you, get a G400. They work with the exact same GLX module (and the DRI module, if you ever decide to go for XFree 4.0.1), so you won't have to change your setup much. The plain G400 OEM goes for under $100.
I recommend this despite the fact that the GeForce 2 MX would no doubt be faster, and not a whole lot more expensive. The problem is that the drivers for the GeForce 2 MX only work under XFree 4.0.1
Re:You pansy! I have... NO VIDEO CARD in my Linux (Score:1)
Now that is an Open System.
Voodoo 4 4500 (Score:1)
Re:Voodoo 4 4500 (Score:1)
ah for christsake... (Score:1)
Re:I HATE ATI (Score:2)
Lucky you aren't one of those miserable Mac users, the crap we've had to put up with from ATI. .
Re: ATi drivers (Score:1)
The preminary work on these two projects has been done, so if people really wanted to start making kernel modules or whatever, it could be done. It's just that no one apparently has the time, and since the cards are pretty old anyways, I think everyone pretty much considers them obsolete.
Personally, I know several people who've said that they'll never buy ATi again, because (a) they can't make windows drivers, and (b) they pointedly ignored linux for yeaaaaaaars, when the Rage Pro was the big thing.
Me, I'm still undecided.
James
serial ports and terminals (Score:1)
My serial port is a very high powered video card that drives my Wyse terminal on linux.
Re:So ... what about affordable Linux gaming? (Score:3)
While setting up GLX was a pain in the ass, most of the ass pain came from the flakey AGP slot on the cheap motherboard I got. If you go for high end made in Taiwan rather than low end made in Taiwan (or Intel) your life should be much easier.
I set up Xfree 4.x at work and that seemed to be pretty easy, as long as you use a kernel that supports the DRI stuff.
Anyway, I like Matrox since they've traditionally been one of the more Open Source friendly companies. If Nvidia's opened up their Geforce2 drivers yet, it'd no doubt be a more future proof card.
Re:Matrox clarity (Score:1)
Check out the matrox closeout/discontinued store section too, they have nice deals on older cards.
Easier to use links (Score:3)
If you're like me, the fact that Sharky Extreme doesn't use hyperlinks to their best extent is driving you insane. Although their info is always sound.
Make you life easier and get straight to the goods you want:
Enjoy!
Best card on the market (Score:1)
Also if anyone knows the best DVD drive to get I'm looking to retire my CDROM, and the DVD controller which will be on the V56K is certainly going to be a plus.
Re:ghetto bitch. (Score:1)
Re:What's the need? (Score:2)
Re:You pansy! I have... NO VIDEO CARD in my Linux (Score:1)
Re:Marketing vs. Necessity (Score:1)
Basically, you aren't the person the review was talking to. The review was aimed at people looking for high performance video cards for little money. If you don't need a high performance video card...(wait for it...)
Don't buy one.
Summary please? (Score:1)
All I want to know, is which card came out on top.
WWJD -- What Would Jimi Do?
Re:What's the need? (Score:1)
Yea you can get a cheap card.. but (Score:1)
GO BIG!
Re:Voodoo 4 4500 (Score:2)
By the way, if ANYONE out there gets this, make sure you get the updated drivers, especially if you have a KT-133 chipset on your mobo. It hangs if you don't. Yes, firsthand experience tells me so.
Re:So ... what about affordable Linux gaming? (Score:1)
Re:Linux gaming: voodoo value (Score:2)
Re:Good For You (Score:1)
Re:Marketing vs. Necessity (Score:1)
Re:So ... what about affordable Linux gaming? (Score:2)
The only comparisons have been between cards that have 3D support in both XF4 and XF3. In these cases, the XF3 drivers are usually more mature and thus better optimized. NVidia cards, on the other hand, have nothing resembling a 3D driver for anything less than XFree4 (the XF3 driver sucked), but their XF4 drivers are faster than any 3D driver for any other card in Linux, period. In other words, don't choose the card for the XFree version, choose the XFree version for the card.
XF4.0.1 runs perfectly for me on my NVidia GeForce 2, and on RH6.2 it should be very easy to set up (with RPM's). I doubt it would be any more trouble than trying to get any other graphics card to work right, but then you never know when it comes to X and XFree86. :/
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Re:Yes, it does matter. (Score:1)
$150 for a video card?!?! (Score:2)
Re:Marketing vs. Necessity (Score:1)
Using that logic, how do you explain all the soccer mums with their Explorers and Suburbans? I bet the most demanding driving condition they get is driving up the kerb into their driveway...
Back to the topic... I think the previous poster was trying to point out that all gamers have been lumped into a group and they all need a 3D card, cos 'you need it'.
I personally have a Celeron 500 with a TNT 2 and I am very happy with my 64 fps in Quake 3...
Re:Linux gaming: voodoo value (Score:1)
Why would you trust XFree86 to write a better driver for NVidia's cards than NVidia themselves? Sure, it's open source (and yeah, open source is usually good), but if you look at the state of current 3D drivers, the "open source" Voodoo 5 driver is crap [linuxgames.com]. The drivers for all NVidia cards, on the other hand, have consistently shown themselves to be of extremely high quality. I use them myself (GeForce 2), and obviously I'm a happy customer. :)
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Re:Linux gaming: voodoo value (Score:1)
Just a clarification: There are plenty of good open source drivers out there. My point is that "open source" does not always mean "better", although it often does. :)
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Marketing vs. Necessity (Score:4)
Re:Boycot NVIDIA (Score:1)
Why can't it be that simple? When you suggest boycotting you turn this into a political agenda. You want to punish NVidia because after all, every hardware make who isn't releasing open source drivers MUST be the spawn of satan, right?
NVidia isn't the only company out there keeping their drivers closed, only the most successful, so you're basically punishing them for being the best.
It'd be much simpler to understand if there were no linux drivers for NVidia cards, like in the matter of the newer Logitech quickcams, but in reality, NVidia has hands down the best graphics card drivers out there.
A penny for your thoughts.
What about decent PCI cards? (no, really) (Score:2)
What I really want is a G200/G400 dual-head PCI, but you can't get them anywhere! Someone could do really nicely making a decent-spec PCI video card specifically to be a second head - not super-fast, but reasonable. Re-release the PCI TNT. Make a GeForce NotSoUltra (same capabilities, 1/4 of the bandwidth). Whatever. I think there really is a market for second-screen video cards.
(of course, I'd also like nVidia to support 3d on other Xfree86 implementations rather than just provide a great big linux-only binary hackup, but that's another story. I don't use GL on X too much, although partly because of this)
better things to do with my power (Score:2)
Re:Voodoo 4 4500 (Score:2)
Re:So ... what about affordable Linux gaming? (Score:3)
The following affordable linux games are known to work perfectly under all the tested cards.
In fact, almost every game in the bsd-games package is well suited to these "value" cards, with the exception of maybe "fish".
Try a V3 or V4 PCI (Score:2)
3dfx still makes decent PCI cards. They're widely available, and you can sometimes find the V3-2000 PCI for $60 or less. Image quality and performance are actually quite good, and the V3 overclocks well (if you're into that).
If you're looking for something a little newer, the V4-4500 PCI and V5-5500 PCI cost a little more, but still perform quite well compared to their AGP counterparts.
Matrox clarity (Score:2)
All other things being considered, the Matrox cards continue to have the best output quality, bar none in this price range. From the Matrox Millenium II on forward, this has been true.
If you want a card that really holds up to high refresh rates at high resolutions for your 2D work, the Matrox deserves extra consideration.