Trident Back From the Dead 234
FunkyMonkey writes "It seems that Trident is trying to pull a Matrox and resurrect themselves from
the 3D video card grave yard. AnandTech
posted a Trident
XP4 Preview today that has some interesting information on Trident's latest
stab at the graphics market. The company is claiming 80% the performance of the
GeForce 4 TI 4600 at a price tag of less than $100 USD including DX 9 support.
How? A 0.13 micron process and only 30 million transistors thanks to pipeline
resource sharing. "
Trident 8900 (Score:3, Insightful)
Having said that, this preview has no hardware, and hence no benchmarks or qualitative/quantitative reviews. This is nothing more than market fluff at this point.
Re:Trident 8900 (Score:1)
Re:Trident 8900 (Score:3, Funny)
This substance, also known as corporate BS (cBS2) is available almost anywhere where products are sold. Due to its ready availability and near-infinite supply, specialists are looking into its computing usages.
Marketing fluff has long been known to transfer information at a very great rate, often causing the specs of a product to arrive before the product itself is created. This, using the theory of relativity, means that the cBS2 is transfering information at a rate greater than the speed of light, making it the fastest transfer medium that has been found up to this point.
Re:Trident 8900 (Score:4, Funny)
I choked when I had to replace the card. Replaced it with an ET4000 card. (Only problem with Et4000 was its allergy to PCI-ISA bridge chipsets.).
For an ISA card it was damn fast.
(Tridents response to me when I asked about the frequency problem was 'Go buy a new, 1Meg video card'. I did... it just wasn't a trident.)
Re:Trident 8900 (Score:2)
My file server (no X11, no monitor) has an Nvidia Geforce 2MX... hey, it was already in the barebones system I used as a base to start from!
Re:Trident 8900 (Score:2)
Went thru many kernel upgrades and reboots and never missed the monitor, also because it sits in a tiny closet where I can't hear its noise and a screen+keyboard wouldn't even fit in that place.
On the other hand, I *do* appreciate that it eats a couple Watts less, gives off less heat, and I really hope someone builds an AGP Gigabit Ethernet card someday, since that's the only free slot left
Re:Trident 8900 (Score:2)
now *this* is an idea worth looking into. tired of sharing your system RAM with your video card? turn the tables.
before you know it we'll have bootable floppies which require only 1 MB RAM and a fat video card, creating a VRAMFS slice and going to work.
Re:Trident 8900 (Score:2)
Not that it can't happen.
It's mapped in memory just like regular memory. At least it was last time I checked...With todays tech, who the hell knows. Maybe only the card gets to see the memory...
oh boy.... (Score:1)
The last time I saw trident was on a Packed Bell computer, if thats any indication of quality.
Re:oh boy.... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Remember dudes, everything is constant. Nothing ever changes, even if many years have gone by.
Re:oh boy.... (Score:1)
Re:oh boy.... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Trident (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Trident (Score:1)
Re:Trident (Score:2)
4 out of 5 dentists would recommend it to their gum-chewing patients, and it may reduce the risk of tooth decay.
I know, I have a cinnamon value pack right in front of me.
Chew on this... (Score:2, Funny)
We had a Trident card in the first 486 (SX33!) we had, and I remember thinking that I could probably get a faster display using Trident Gum...
Hope they've changed things a bit.
Oh nooo!! (Score:1, Funny)
*ahem*
Yes, sir. I ownded a Trident, too.
Re:Oh nooo!! (Score:1)
There, I said it, I said the words.
*Grabs the Necronomicon and books*
Not a DirectX 9 part (Score:5, Informative)
For that matter, no current processor has the fill rate necessary to comply with the Pixel Shader 2.0 specs, except possibly the Radeon 9700, which isn't yet available for benchmarking.
And while the specs are good for an entry level part, count the number of launch partners-zero.
Re:Not a DirectX 9 part (Score:1)
Re:Not a DirectX 9 part (Score:2)
Re:Not a DirectX 9 part (Score:1)
I really do wish that there were open standards across the boards, but I don't see it ever happening when Microsoft has such a big share of windows gamers.
Re:Not a DirectX 9 part (Score:3, Funny)
"HEY KIDS!! Now with GL_NV_OCCLUSION_QUERY and GL_NV_VERTEXT_ARRAY_RANGE2 support!"
Re:Not a DirectX 9 part (Score:3, Informative)
Re:no (Score:2)
benchmarks from a full retail release product.
ATI has also released a newer (supposedly faster)
version of thier catalyst drivers in the interim.
Which may have additional impact on the performance of the cards once the popular review
sites get actual, testable, cards to make use of.
Re:Not a DirectX 9 part (Score:2, Interesting)
mczak
Nothing wrong with a little competition... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Nothing wrong with a little competition... (Score:2, Troll)
Trident has been known for sucky performance and bad quality hardware.
I really don't miss them.. I hope they spend a fortune on this and go bankrupt or something.
Re:Nothing wrong with a little competition... (Score:3, Interesting)
You won't see them going anywhere any time soon. If they were exclusivly doing chips for PCs, then maybe, but that isn't the case.
Re:Nothing wrong with a little competition... (Score:2)
If you didn't want to deal with that, you could spend $100 on your graphics card. You are apparently not in Trident's target market. If you had a head on your shoulders, you would never have dealt with them at all. Otherwise, you would have been happy to save the $70.
Their Name (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Their Name (Score:2)
I don't know. I like there gum. I havn't tried any of their other products, but it couldn't have been that bad
Re:Their Name (Score:3, Insightful)
From the article, "If you sliced the desktop graphics market into 4 different sectors ( $300) you'd realize that the largest volumes would be in the sub-$100 range, and that's exactly what Trident is targeting with their XP4."
Trident is going after the market where they can sell the most volume of video cards and if they can really deliver on 80% of the performance of a GeForce4 Ti 4600, it will be well worth it.
Re:Their Name (Score:2)
Re:Their Name (Score:2)
All cards manufactured during that time frame were slow. You can't pull a card from 10 years ago and expect it to compete with today's accelerated 3D cards. They just didn't exist back then. Sure, Trident's cards made back then are slow today. But they are reliable and do the basic job of delivering a signal to the monitor well.
Given the technology they have to work with today, their past vision would be welcome.
Re:Their Name (Score:2)
The stigma (Score:2)
For me, the stigma is not with the name but their support. I got a company laptop with a trident card. need i say more? i will anyway, no driver support under linux. so no X. no more trident for me. what's even worse is that there is a third part driver but has a small quirk (intermittantly types in multiple chars when i hit a key) trident could have just helped this guy fix the driver. but guess not. they want to keep their IP to themselves. they can keep their video cards to themselves too.
Re:Their Name (Score:2)
Re:Their Name (Score:2, Funny)
Good luck, they'll need it... (Score:5, Insightful)
1) OEM's
2) Gamers
Gamers will likely pay the premimum to get that extra 20% of performance. Also, the NVIDIA name carries a certain assurance that it's all going to work well.
As for OEM's, harder to say. One the one hand you've got some systems where the goal is being cheap and you go for an integrated chipset. Then on others the goal is best performance and thus the premium for 20% becomes worthwhile. There's a middle there, but I don't know how wide that middle is.
Re:Good luck, they'll need it... (Score:2)
Also, the NVIDIA name carries a certain assurance that it's all going to work well.
Yeah. It'll work great. Until you want to play games in something kinder on the eyes at 60Hz refresh rate on 2K or XP. Then you'll find that they're a pile of shite!
Re:Good luck, they'll need it... (Score:1)
OEM on the other hand, is a completely different animal. Most OEM builders want good parts, but not great parts. I could easily spend $4000 on a pc, but a $1200 pc sounds much nicer to the masses, as long as the processor has a high number, the graphics card has the going ram on it, and it's Internet Ready, guess which one you're going to sell.
Take a look at any mass-marketed PC ad in the paper, and you'll see only 32 or 64 mb graphics card listed, and not the make and model.
The last PC's I bought had Asus V7100 cards in them. In an office where most desktops sit at 8X6, it's overkill. But that was the bottom rung. If they had 4meg PCI's for sale, I would have bought those.
Solitare doesn't need hardware acceleration!
Gamers (Score:1)
However, there are a lot of the rest of us who don't want to drop that kind of cash, who cant tell the difference between 100 fps and 140 fps, and who would have to look a while to tell the difference between 24 bit and 32 bit graphics. We are NOT the people who buy games at midnight the day they come out, dressed up as a damned orc (yeah, you WC III freaks, that's you) or some Jedi retard for Outcast. We even wait until the games come down from $50 to buy them.
There are a lot of people like that. Check it out - NVIDIA is still selling the shit out of the Ti 4200, and even GF III's. There is a market there, and while I don't trust Trident, I will be buying a $150-$200 GeForce in a few months - to replace my, ahem, TNT2. *duck*
Re:Good luck, they'll need it... (Score:2)
Marketing stratagey 101 (Score:2)
Re:Marketing stratagey 101 (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Marketing stratagey 101 (Score:2)
The cheapest pricewatch price [pricewatch.com] for a GF4 Ti4600 is $280.
The entry price of the Trident card is $99 (or so the article says.)
So would you by a card that has 20% less performance than a GF4 Ti4600 and 65% (or better) less cost? Maybe not. But would you put one in your kids' machine or kid brother's machine who has been whining about wanting a 3D upgrade so they can play Max Payne?
Cha-ching! Cash for Trident from your wallet.
Re:Marketing stratagey 101 (Score:2)
1. Make card 80% as powerful as competition.
2. Make card cost 1/3 of the competition's.
3.Sell cards like crazy because few people want to spend >$200 on the video card alone.
4. Profit!
Most people are satisfied with the performance of a mid-range video card, and 80% of a high-end card for 30% of the price would be great for many of the "demanding" average users.
Some people are happy with their graphics, even if they can't get 150 fps out of Quake III.
Class 90/10 (Score:4, Insightful)
Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
Guess what? THOSE CARDS ARE YESTERDAY'S NEWS! Trident is making a different card with different chips and different circuits. They'll have different performance than the old cards!!!!
Now the new card is going to be cheap, which makes me suspicious of its performance/quality. However, discounting is out of hand because their last card (or even every card before this one) is completely pointless and wrong-headed. Look at the card, and then decide if it sucks. Amazing that so many of you have to be told that.
Lets also not forget that Trident did extremely well selling 'shite' cards. At one point there were more 8900 chips than any other single video chip in PCs at the time! Cheap, slow, but great where you just need a screen. (like my console server and my firewall, for instance)
So get over the past.
Re:Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:2)
I'm sure a lot of death row killers are also trying to CHANGE.
Re:Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:2)
Re:Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:1)
Who else says this all the time...
Oh wait a minute, a thought is entering my mind...
"Windows XP -- The best windows ever!"
The only way Trident can shake their past is to either change their name (sneaky) or release this product, ensure it lives up to their marketed performance, and release another. By the second or third release cycle I might buy it, because by then they'll have rebuilt their lost trust.
Maybe. But I really doubt it. I expect to see their stuff in many more crappy PCChips and ECS boards to come, and I don't expect things to change all that much.
Re:Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:2)
People say the same thing about AMD chips, but they're not exactly going out of business.
But overall I agree with you ... we must look at a real non-vapourware card and benchmark it before slandering Trident.
Re:Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:2)
Re:Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:2)
True, with some caveats.
"Its up to Trident to overcome their past history."
Also true. (although their history is for making really really cheap cards which they in fact did fairly well)
"Until then, they deserve the negative response they get."
Not really. They deserve some suspicion certainly, but they don't deserve to be written off wholesale, sight-unseen. They deserve the chance to overcome their past, whether or not they can.
For the record, ATI drivers for Solaris are flawless.
Re:Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:2)
Re:Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:2)
Re:Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:2)
Re:Hey Idiots! They're trying to CHANGE!!! (Score:2)
Once Solaris takes over, it can do whatever it wants, of course.
Yeah, but who really makes the *cards*?? (Score:4, Interesting)
But I've been gravely disappointed by every PCI/AGP Trident-based card I've seen. Slow as molasses, and the AGP cards have a shit screen font (apparently pilfered from an old Diamond chip). OTOH they do still get along with everything, and they're VERY cheap ($8.00!!), so I use 'em for testing hardware and for "anything that outputs a video signal will do" situations.
In short -- good points: cheap, stable, well-behaved, drivers always available, PCIs and earlier have a really good screen font; bad points: PCI and AGP are both slow as mud (MUCH slower than the claims typically printed on the box), *no* VESA 2.0 support in hardware (so can't do hires outside of Win32), AGP models have a horrible screen font.
But when I went to Trident's site to get information on one of the newer cards, I was presented with a long disclaimer which boiled down to: "Trident only makes CHIPS. Trident has NEVER made *video cards*, ever, period. We only supply drivers as a convenience to you. Don't ask us about any video cards, they're not our fault, we didn't make them, and we don't support them!!"
After reading that, I wrote Trident sales and tech support to this effect: "In that case, you'd better keep an eye on who you supply chips to, because these uniformly-awful recent Trident-based cards are giving Trident a bad name." (No response.)
Anyway.. since Trident disclaims making anything but chips -- my question is WHO IS MAKING THE "TRIDENT" CARDS??
Re:Yeah, but who really makes the *cards*?? (Score:2)
Yes! The ISA Trident cards are still my video card of choice for consoles. Their character set has a nice curl on the lower-case 'l', making it really easy to distinguish from '1'. I've yet to find another card, any vendor, any bus, that has a font that nice.
Re:Yeah, but who really makes the *cards*?? (Score:2)
I have an ISA 8900 in an XT, believe it or not. The older Trident-based cards have another advantage I'd forgotten in my previous post: All the control lines are in the part of the card that plugs into the 8bit bus. The rest of the bus is only used to increase thruput. So you can hang a Trident ISA card in an 8bit slot, or a VLB card in an ISA slot, and they will still work. A few other ISA cards would also agree to do this, but most won't.
Back to screen fonts.. My peeve with most cards, Diamond in particular, is the EGA-style screen font: specficially the narrow lowercase m, which is hard to tell from a lowercase n. ATI cards have a tolerable screen font (m/n not quite right but at least legible), tho it sorta looks like it really wanted to be italics, which gets annoying after a while.
Some S3Trio and S3Virge cards have the same nice screen font as the old Tridents. And I was thrilled when I got a Matrox Millennium G200 and found it too had the same screen font! Guess what's now my card of choice for midrange Pentiums
There are old DOS utils to extract a screen font from the video BIOS and apply it to another system TSR-style, tho I've never used this trick.
And change they may. (Score:2)
Seriously, you just proved his point.
Companies aren't genetically pre-disposed toward a course of action. They weren't abused when they were young and are therefore more likely to settle into that same pattern.
Companies have not been subjected to rigorous Pavlovian testing (hear the bell ring and produce a low-end graphics chipset!). While they may occasionally be stricken with poor management, they can, and do, change.
--
Meanwhile, back at the site, ACs were posting for no reason.
Is it too late? (Score:3, Insightful)
I was at a presentations about asynchronous logic by a company who did some research into the area.
They took the advantage of fast and fine grain asynchronous pipelines but by then nvidia was in the market and they claim they had no chance copeating with them.
If trident can come out of the blue and make a card %80 of the speed of a gforce4 then maybe they and others gave up too early.
Re:Is it too late? (Score:2)
when a market is mostly driven by one company, its vision can get narrow, nVidia say this, and is releasing video cards of different qualitys. this is a good idea, but there marketing has blown it with there naming, Now its confusing to know which one is the best without research.
how? (Score:1)
Usually in these situations, the marketing dept. designed the spec's for a less than wonderful implementation by the tech dept resulting in the usual h/w crud where we cringe at the mention of their name - cyrix, celeron, early AMD, Acer CDROM's, hellokitty, etc...
Trident sucks, Trident triumphs (Score:1)
I, for one also, had a Trident 8900 board in my oldie 486 computer, and boy did it suck. It was so slow and disgusting and, and..
Perhaps it's the fact that it's a big and ugly ISA card, designed with no hurry in mind, unlike those overclocked and packed 3D-miracles we have today.. But I am still a bit astonished it's actually working without any errors, and the picture is still a solid square.
But please, for the love of 3D gamers, stay dead, will ya?
Re:Trident sucks, Trident triumphs (Score:1)
I, for one also, had a Trident 8900 board in my oldie 486 computer, and boy did it suck. It was so slow and disgusting and, and..
Of course, it's all relative. The trident 8900, like all of it Cirrus Logic competitors, were nothing more than a frame buffer that it was up to your CPU to fill : There was virtually no difference between the speed of these unaccelerated cards, and the limit was often the ISA bus (hence why Carmageddon ran that much better on a VL-Bus system).
Trident! Woohoo! (Score:1)
There was nothing less fun than having to find OEM Trident drivers for a crappy Windows 95A desktop.
Good lord how we hated on the board Trident video.
trident cheap...but good in a "niche" (Score:2, Interesting)
Interesting (Score:1)
The real potential problems with this: driver compatilibity and Linux support. If their drivers turn out sucky, well, *DUH*. And if they remain tight-lipped about their 'intellectual property', they'd better release decently performing DRI drivers.
--
A differing opinion. (Score:4, Informative)
I've always liked Tridents, especially in comparison to S3; they work.
Not the power gaming card, but good for general performance on a budget.
No DRI/GLX (Score:2)
Welcome Back Trident (Score:4, Insightful)
I remember back in the day picking up PCI Trident 9680 cards from the local wholesaler for $30, and they rivaled the performence of more expensive S3 Trio64V+ based cards. Yes, Trident has been asleep at the wheel during the 3D accelerator revolution, but if wasn't for them, I wouldn't have been playing Duke Nukem 3D at 40+ FPS on a $30 graphics card, or watching MPEG1 VideoCDs full screen at full framerate (the 9680 and up have directdraw overlay support). Unlike ATI at the time (and there was no Nvidia), Trident's drivers were rock-solid and I never experienced visual glitches or driver-related lockups.
There's a lot to thank Trident for (most recently, the CyberBlade intergrated chipset on the I-Opener) and as long as they produce a cost effective product with good stable drivers, there's a place for them in the video chipset market.
Trident not all that bad... (Score:5, Informative)
While they did have quite a few problems with accepting parts from anywhere, the cards I have purchased were VERY inexpensive and did what they said they could. Personally, that's all I ask.
Yes, they had 3D cards with 4MB of ram that ran at 1024x768. That card works great when doing regular Windows stuff at 1024x768, and when doing 3D at 640x480. It meets the specs, and has a reasonable 3D triangle rate. That particular card is also AGP, which allows great performance for the test machine it is on (P2-300 with 192 MB RAM).
People often complain about them, but I think that's because they expect whatever they buy to be the best, even when they don't fork out the money for the best.
If you read the story, they even point this out:
Their homepage [tridentmicro.com] even says: " Trident is a global leader in providing affordable, low-power, state-of-the-art 3D graphics integrated circuit solutions for mainstream notebook and personal desktop computers. ". It doesn't say it's an incredible gaming solution, or even claim to be the best; they are there to give non-gamers and non-geeks enough 3D to meet their basic needs at well-under a quarter of the cost of even a GeForce 2. They can give OEM's an integrated 3D card for practically nothing, so the consumers can either use the near-free, low end abilities, or spend the money on a high-end card.
IMO, the people who don't like Trident are the ones who bought them thinking they were getting a high-power GPU at a firesale price.
Frob.
Re:Trident not all that bad... (Score:2)
Then I tried running games on it. The image quality, at best, was worse than the Direct3D software renderer -- the textures were blurred beyond recognition and the framerate was lower than in software mode. And the drivers had a peculiar bug where enabling MIP mapping shaded all but the closest textures purple.
Needless to say, I haven't bought a Trident product since. It's very likely their products have greatly improved since then, but this is the kind of thing that keeps people from wanting to buy Trident products.
Initial 3D cards (Score:2)
Re:Initial 3D cards (Score:2)
Like I said, Trident has probably massively improved their 3D accelerators (since you can't stay in business selling faulty hardware) but this is what makes people not want to get Trident cards, not the "my GeForce is bigger than yours" syndrome.
Why is everyone so hard on Trident? (Score:5, Insightful)
Besides, what was wrong with Trident? Sure the drivers could at times be hard to find...this is not that much different from ATI and some of the Radeon 7500 drivers. Trident cards are damn hard to kill and I still have a brace of them in use in my Linux servers. These are cards that date back to '95 and the 486 and they are still going.
And honestly, 80% of the capability of a TI-4600 would be perfect for the computers that I make for my friends and thier children playing the Hardware accellerated Edu-Tainment software that is coming out. For them I need something pretty good at a reasonable cost. Which is the market that Trident has always sat in. Pretty good and pretty inexpensive.
Which brings up another point. With so many people out there willing to go with almost as good but cheaper cards, ATI and nVidia will have to rethink thier pricing schemes...Personally I'd love to see the TI-4600 drop a little more before I chuck my GF3TI-500 for it.
Re:Why is everyone so hard on Trident? (Score:2)
I just hope it's not just hype and will come out reasonably soon.
Why the resurrections? (Score:2)
80% Performace for $100? (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't get me wrong, I love market competition as much as anyone. I hope Trident can compete with Nvidia and ATI, but even if this PR bullshit proves true, they're still behind the curve as far as I can tell.
This is the same Trident (Score:5, Interesting)
Based on that experience, I'll probably buy the video card. So long as it includes a Linux driver.
Re:This is the same Trident (Score:2)
Spot on. All the NVidia performance in the world doesn't do me a darn bit of good without a Free Software driver. Sure, I can buy an NVidia card and hope they keep supporting their closed source driver, but I would much rather purchase hardware that came with a Free Software driver (even if the hardware isn't quite as spiffy). The fact that the card will be cheaper is also a huge bonus.
Re:This is the same Trident (Score:2)
It would be nice if the Trident part doesn't need its own fan.
Re:This is the same Trident (Score:2, Interesting)
A quick Google search came up with complaints that they aren't providing the Xfree86 developers specs of their hardware and apparently number of their common chipsets remain unaccelerated under Linux. Since Trident has pretty much fallen off radar however I don't know if that is still true. Graphics chips being their bread and butter, and common in cheap generic hardware, I'm not sure I'd raise them on an open source pedestal for providing drivers for some of their sound chips only.
They are parading the banners of some of the largest PC OEMs on their website, a number of which (try to) appear friendly towards the Linux community, so it'd be truly positive if their upcoming commodity chips would be properly supported by open source drivers. Closed binary drivers may be fine for a while, until the company cuts the oxygen supply.
On the dark shadowy corner we have Micro$oft, the eternal holders of the DirectX belt, who would much rather not see a flood of $300 PCs coming out with complete and perfect driver support under Linux...
I'd kind of be up for a new video card and the specs per price ratio of these new Tridents seem okay to me, but I'm hoping to give my cash to really nice guys who really support my favourite platform.
When will they get it? (Score:2)
Cards are so fast these days, I'd gladly sacrifice a 25-50% performance edge for the portability and reliability advantages of an open-source driver. ATI, Matrox, Trident - I'm waiting...
Re:When will they get it? (Score:2, Interesting)
I was waiting too until I got sick of it and got a GF4 4200 128MB. Yes, the drivers are closed source but they are fully featured and work *fine*. Sure beats my friend's Radeon 8500 open source driver which still doesn't support half of the things the card is capable of. How long does he have to wait to get the full support for the hardware he bought 6 months ago? ATI is cheap and lame - they think they only have to open the specs for the card while the Weather Channel pays for the driver development. I mean the Radeaon 9700 will cost $400. For that kind of money I bloody well expect a shiny new Linux driver.
Pull a Matrox? (Score:2, Interesting)
I hardly think Matrox comparing Matrox to Trident is very fair. Matrox did not "come back from the dead" with the Parhelia, they just attempted to compete in the gaming market. While they did not release a Ti4600 killer, the Parhelia did introduce a number of innovative features. But G-series cards have been quite successful for the past few years in the workstation and financial markets with Matrox's excellent dual-head capabilities. Trident on the otherhand hasn't released a competitive card on any level in many years, so this announcement is in fact a resurrection of sorts.
Please do not buy Trident products (Score:2, Interesting)
Hopefully low heat... (Score:2)
At 0.13 micron and with the low transistor count they advertise, maybe this will be it.
If it's 90% as fast as a GeForce4, and puts out a lot less heat, I'm there.
I'll wait for reviews and drivers to see.
Jon Acheson
Let me see if I can recap my video card history. (Score:3, Interesting)
Amiga - (Paula, Fat Agnus and Denise - OCS)
Win311 - PCI Trident Card (1 meg memory, yes!)
Win95 - S3 Virge (de-cellerator, Came with OEMed Decent)
Win98 - Nvidia TNT 8 megs (Diamond MM)
Win98SE - Dual Voodoo2's and Nvidia TNT (DMM)
Win98SE - Dual Voodoo2's and Nvidia TNT2 (DMM)
Win98SE - Geforce 1 (DMM)
Win2K - Geforce 256 (Asus)
Win2K - Geforce 2MX (Asus)
WinXP - Geforce 3 Ti500 (Asus)
Linux Box - PCI Trident (8 meg)
Linux Box2 - S3 Savage AGP (16 meg)
I remember looking at video cards for some unix boxes, the 2 choices for a cheap card for a long time was Jaton branded pci cards(Trident chips) or Cirus video cards. I tried to go with jaton, the trident chips always had good opensource drivers. I still try to get trident videos card for linux boxes I build, but they are harder to find at local wholesale stores.
The only card I never used, which I heard had great linux support was any Matrox cards, the prices were just to high, and always slower than the others for games.
-
Do you DirectVNC? [adam-lilienthal.de]
I wish Trident lotsa luck! (Score:2)
I'm not sure if OEM's here in the USA want to install cards using the new Trident XP4 chipset, especially when you consider that for slightly more money OEM's can install cards with the ATI RV250 chipset, which will likely offer much better overall 3-D performance, especially for DirectX 9.0. Indeed, the ATI RV250 chipset cards are definitely aimed for the various small computer assemblers, and because of the cachet of the ATI brand name will likely be quite popular, too.
Re:Who's next? (Score:5, Interesting)
Hercules is one of the biggest manufacturers of current video cards. They are using the latest nVidia (maybe not for long), ATi, and PowerVR chips in their boards. They were purchased by Guillimot a few year back and have been making some excellent products. In my opinion, they were the pioneers of high quality video boards when the nVidia GeForce series started to take off. Recent connections with ATi and PowerVR though have soured the nVidia relationship.
Cirrus Logic is currently making some of the best audio DSPs in the business. You can see (hear) their chips in the Turtle Beach Santa Cruz, Hercules Game Theatre XP, and a few others. Most operate on a dual chip DSP setup that allows a lot of control for audio spatialization, and their reference design for boards based on the CS4630 was designed with quality in mind. Currently, they also create DSPs for a lot of integrated devices, including portable MP3 and WMA players.
S3 on the other hand, still blows, and always will. "SIGHT! SOUND! AND SPEED!" They still have a lot of the cheap OEM integrated market, especially after being purchased by VIA Tech. But that still doesn't make the Savage series any more than pumped up S3 ViRGE chips. It remains to be seen how their Alpha Chrome and Savage XP chips hold up.
Re:Who's next? (Score:2)
Re:Who's next? (Score:2)
Re:Who's next? (Score:3, Interesting)
I have an ISA VGA Trident Video Card in my Linux router. It has 256k of video memory, and let me tell you, when I used to use it on a Windows 2000 server, it used to take 5 seconds to redraw the page.
BUT, on a related note, it is still working, and has been working for almost 10 years straight. Much better than the Radeon that I bought 2 years ago, which has now been moved to by web server, because it only works half the time. Trident makes cards that may not be quick, but they are pretty cheap, and seem to last forever. Never had a problem with one. If I'm looking for a video card for a server, I don't want to have to spend $60-80 on an ATI card. I want a $30 Trident card.
Re:Odd Ad... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Yeah but whoever is serving the banners can get good data on what IPs have the most reloads on anti-microsoft stories.
And I'm sure MSFT could do something with that information. Maybe they could find out which company has the most anti-MSFT slashdot readers and send the executives of that company on a nice MSFT-sponsored vacation and then start hawking Visual Studio .NET to them.