Radeon 9700 Pro: ATI Ahead 378
Keefe writes "The epic battle between ATI and Nvidia wages on. While Nvidia awaits arrival of their near-fabled NV30 for redemption, ATI conquers all by introducing the fastest and most advanced graphics card to date. The next-generation ATI Radeon 9700 Pro marks the second time Nvidia cedes the performance crown to ATI (the first time being the brief glory when the ATI Rage Fury beat the Nvidia TNT). See how the ATI Radeon 9700 Pro stacks up at Techware Labs."
Eh? (Score:3, Informative)
???
Re:Eh? (Score:5, Funny)
No kidding, this is the most out of date story I've seen on slashdot. Next the'll be releasing
386 Released with a math CoProcessor
reviews explaining the performance difference between the 386SX and 386DX here [pw.edu.pl]
Re:Eh? (Score:5, Informative)
reviews explaining the performance difference between the 386SX and 386DX here
Ehm.....
Actually the link between the math coprocessor and the SX/DX name is an 80486 thing.
80386SX (Singleword Xchange) had a 16bit bus and could be plugged into a 286 board.
80386DX (Doubleword Xchange) had a 32bit bus and needed a new motherboard design (but was way faster because of the wider data bus, and could directly address more memory)
When the 80486 was introduced, the SX/DX distinction remained, this time to indicate the presence of the built-in FPU.
Urban myth wants that 80486SX's were full-blown CPUs in which the FPU silicon had failed tests, or, later, was just disabled, even though perfectly working.
Even worse was the fact that the 80487 was actually a FULL CPU+FPU, and not just an FPU. Upon startup it would disable the main processor and do everything. What a waste of power....
I never knew if the Weitek 4167 did this too.
Re:Eh? (Score:4, Informative)
The 386DX had both a 32bit Data bus and a 32bit address bus.
The 486SX was a 486DX with the FPU disabled (This is not urban myth, comparisons of the die confirmed this), nobody knows why the FPU was disabled, apart from the fact it was.
80486SX FPU disabled (Score:2)
At the time, Intel stated that the lower price of the 486SX wasn't just a marketing ploy, but representative of the fact that the FPU required significantly more (and more complicated) QC testing than the integer logic on the CPU, so the lower price reflected the lower cost to manufacture. Not that anybody believed that, mind you. Intel also claimed the FDIV bug in early Pentiums was incredibly rare and not worth worrying about.
Re:Eh? (Score:2, Interesting)
Intel would rather than have a part they can sell for less (a 486 minus the coprocessor) rather than a completely "broken" and unmarketable part.
Re:Eh? (Score:2)
Re:Eh? (Score:2)
There was someone else (forgot who) who actually had 3x3 vector ops and other stuff as well in a standard 387 package. So you could do the SIMD shit intel has been screaming about now 10 years ago. if you shelled out for the chip of course. It was not very expensive either...
Overall it was Weitek, AMD and that "someone else, forgot who" who had better FPUs then Intel.
Re:Radeon 9700 _PRO_ (Score:2)
Re:This just in: Bush defeats Gore (Score:2)
N.
Legacy Gates (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Legacy Gates (Score:5, Informative)
Don't expect the stuff we had with all the Intel procs.
Hey, 2002 is on the phone... (Score:5, Funny)
Hmmm... (Score:5, Interesting)
If only I had a brain, I could figure out what this meant!!
Who would spend ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Who would spend ... (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm still working on a backlog of games - Alice, Suikoden III, Halo, Metroid Prime, No One Lives Forever 2 (on my PC - the only thing it runs is games these days), and I'm just not as "upgrade conscious" as I was the time I bought a new computer because it didn't run Wing Commander III. (And with games like Ultima VII and the like becoming Open Source projects, I've got an ever bigger backlog
Re:Who would spend ... (Score:4, Interesting)
It's the same with processors, or just about any technology equipment. In few months there will be something bigger and better. In some cases smaller and better
I have upgraded from GeForce Ti4200 128MB to the ATI 9700 pro a month ago, and it's been great... I have went from TNT to TNT2, from TNT2 to GeForce 2GTS, from GeForce 2GTS to GeForce 4 Ti4200... before. Normally I try to skip a at least two releases of the latest graphics card, unless there is some great leap in technology, or I have extra money... And neither happens too often
Re:Who would spend ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yep, and who is to say that ATI themselves won't put out a card that outclasses the FX at it's launch time.
> Normally I try to skip a at least two releases of the latest graphics card, unless there is some great leap in technology, or I have extra money...
Yep, same here.
Voodoo2->ATI Rage 128->TNT2->Geforce 1 DDR->GeForce3 200->GeForce4 4400->Radeon Pro 9700
I went from my gf3->gf4->rad9700-pro (one generation to the next to the next) because I had extra money
Doom3 will probably run fine on the 9700 pro, so I don't think I'll upgrade until the successor to the successor to the 9700pro/gf-FX comes out.
Re:Who would spend ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Who would spend ... (Score:2)
The longer nVidia delays getting their product out the door, the more time ATI has to trump it.
Even if ATI doesn't release a new card right away, they'll drop their prices when the GeForceFX does hit store shelves.
Re:Who would spend ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Apparently the way nVidia was quoting it's memory bandwidth numbers was EXTERMELY misleading (like, electically impossible) and, if ATI quoted it's numbers in the same fashion (it was based on some compression, IIRC, which is already in the 9700 Pro) ATI's card was still faster.
Still, there's no reason NOT to upgrade now. This card will run Doom 3 just fine when it comes out (not that I care) and it runs all my current games quite well. There's always something better right around the corner.
Re:Who would spend ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Try these games at 1600x1200 @ 32-bit, and then tell me a new video card won't help.
- Battlefield 1942
- UT2K3
- Morrowind
Personally, if you just got a GeForce 3 or 4, then yeah, you won't see that much difference, except you'll be able to crank up the resolution with the newer cards. For people who have a GeForce 2 (and below) (like me), upgrading to a ATI 9700 Pro, or GeForcs FX *is* a big difference.
But you are correct -- Games requiring 64-bit and 128-bit framebuffers won't be out till next year (2004). I think that's the time to pick up the GeForce FX.
That's always the way... (Score:3, Insightful)
You can wait for the day when there isn't a new piece of hardware on the way that'll toast your current kit, but then you just wait forever.
I actually bought a 9700 Pro just the other day, to go in a new PC. All the parts for that PC were custom chosen, a few to have a good price-performance ratio (e.g., only an Athlon XP 2100+) and a few because they're the best around and I don't expect to upgrade them any time soon (the 9700 Pro).
I've been watching the market for several months now, and AFAICS the 9700 Pro I bought is way cheaper than it was those few months ago when it came out, and is likely to be way cheaper than anything new by nVidia initially will be, if and when that comes out. The performance of the 9700 Pro is still way ahead of everything else currently available, so buying a new PC now, with games very much in mind, what would you have done? Saved a whole 25% and bought a Geforce 4 Ti4600 instead?
This just in: (Score:3, Funny)
The way this card straightens up (Score:2)
Repeat as necessary.
thats the point (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:thats the point (Score:2)
Re:thats the point (Score:2)
Re:thats the point (Score:2)
Re:thats the point (Score:4, Insightful)
Also keep in mind that Nvidia has been making the (painful) switch to 0.13 Micron for the GeForce FX. In a few months, ATI is going to be stuck in a situation where it needs to make this switch as well to stay competitive, and then we'll see how good each company's timing is.
And timing really is the important thing. Consider Saturn vs Playstation 1 or Dreamcast vs Playstation 2, in the console world. In each case, Sega had a BIG lead-time advantage over Sony with (at-the-time) "next generation" consoles, and each time Sony came out on top. "First mover" advantage isn't all it was cracked up to be in the .com era if you actually look at the history of such things.
Re:thats the point (Score:2)
Additionally, I'll take a game at 1600x1200/32bit with 4x FSAA and ansiotropic filtering cranked up at 85FPS over 1600x1200/32bit with no FSAA ar ansio.
ATM I can do the latter with my Ti4200, not the former, if I had an R9700Pro, I could do the former.
Re:thats the point (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:thats the point (Score:5, Insightful)
No moreso than Nvidia these days, unless you don't count nv4_disp.dll BSODS as "unstable" for some reason...
Being faster... (Score:4, Interesting)
How it stacks up ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Hmmm
Nvidia GeForce4 TI : approx $100
ATI 9700 : around $300
Games or software that need 9700 over GeForce4 : 0
Maybe I'll wait until the cost comes down and until there is a true need for that card
9700
Re:How it stacks up ... (Score:5, Funny)
ATI 9700 : around $300
Games or software that need 9700 over GeForce4 : 0
Seeing that look on your friends' faces: Priceless.
There are some things money can't buy; for everything else, there's ATI.
Re:How it stacks up ... (Score:2)
I know you said 'approx' but the lowest ti4200 with 64 megs of RAM I could find was $110.
And the 9700 Pro is @ $280.
And sure, most games today do not need a 9700 Pro. But what about the games in the next few months?
Seems cheaper to me to pony up the extra few bucks and get a card that will deliver the goods for the next couple years than a cheaper card that is almost at the end of it's product cycle.
Unless, of course, you intend on only running X Windows on it.
Re:How it stacks up ... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How it stacks up ... (Score:2)
Why bother getting an nVidia GeForce4 Ti4200 chipset card that will likely bog down with the games I mentioned because they won't support many DX9 features in hardware? Besides, the new Radeon 9500/9500 Pro boards are reasonably priced (under US$200) and offer full DX9 compliancy.
Re:How it stacks up ... (Score:2)
Re:How it stacks up ... (Score:2, Informative)
Actually the only GeForce models that are aprox 100 are the MX model which is just a suped up geforce 2. Just about everyone says to avoid the MX model like it was typhoid Mary.
Nvidia has missed an entire product cycle, Most of ATI's offerings are smoking NVidia's at the same price point. Not to mention being more technologically advanced.
Asheron's Call 2 isn't a DX9 game but it uses the vertex and pixel shader pipeline, and represents at least one game that could probably use the extra horse power of the 9700.
Re:How it stacks up ... (Score:2)
It's no TI 4600 (or Radeon 9700 Pro), but it'll play every game on the market just as well (or at least nearly as well, for the 99.99% of gamers that can't tell the difference between 30 fps and 75 fps) as the Radeon.
However, Pricewatch is also showing the 9700 Pro for $232 including shipping, so take your pick. Given ATI's software track record, I am personally choosing to wait for Doom 3's performance to be tested on both...
Re:How it stacks up ... (Score:2)
"I am personally choosing to wait for Doom 3's performance to be tested on both"
I meant the 9700 Pro and the GF FX.
Either make of card works well for text-based MUDs (Score:3, Funny)
ATI ahead? What? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:ATI ahead? What? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:ATI ahead? What? (Score:2)
You mean the drivers that take 5 minutes to start up X when they don't cause my machine to spontaneously reboot?
Dinivin
Re:ATI ahead? What? (Score:2)
Re:ATI ahead? What? (Score:3, Informative)
Source? All the source that nVidia provides is a small wrapper that links a binary kernel module into the kernel you're using on your system. This gets built every time you install the kernel module (though you're talking about linux and we were talking about FreeBSD, the same is true under either operating system).
Dinivin
Re:ATI ahead? What? (Score:2)
Good for you. Check on #nvidia on the freenode irc network. Ask about the startup time. Most there will know what you're talking about (even if it doesn't happen to them).
Dinvin
Re:ATI ahead? What? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:ATI ahead? What? (Score:2)
Re:ATI ahead? What? (Score:2)
Re:ATI ahead? What? (Score:2)
But with the Nvidia drivers you're not really "building from source" - you're building a wrapper around the drivers from source, the drivers are still a big
This matters to me. I would like to see Open Software on Open Hardware, and thus would rather not give my money to NVidia.
Unfortunately I think the ATI drivers are also closed src. I don't know if any of the current generation cards offer full support for their features with open source drivers.
ATI ahead? Yes Indeed! (Score:2, Informative)
Don't be suckered just because Nvidia has thrown you a bone. If you read some of the developer mailing lists for say, Mplayer, the Nvidia binary drivers leave a lot to be desired.
The surprising part... (Score:5, Interesting)
Back in The Day, it seemed that 3dfx would come out with their card, and hold the performance crown for a few months, then someone else would release theirs, and hold the performance crown for a few months, then 3dfx would release their next generation of cards, and the cycle would continue that way.
It's been all ATI and nVidia now for a number of years, and ATI has only just now figured out that if they want to sell graphics cards to gamers, they have to be faster every once in a while?
I hope it reverts to the old model. Competition can only yield better graphics cards at lower prices.
NV30 - A better value than you think (Score:5, Funny)
-Teckla
Re:NV30 - A better value than you think (Score:2)
Time to change again?? (Score:3, Funny)
Old news and almost redundant. (Score:3, Informative)
But having seen the videos for the Nvidea Fx card I can't see ATI holding the crown for long.
Re:Old news and almost redundant. (Score:2)
Re:Old news and almost redundant. (Score:2)
Re:Old news and almost redundant. (Score:2)
Price differences (Score:2)
I still agree with whoever (likely several people) said that its pointless to spend so much cash when this kind of polygon pumping power isnt even needed yet.
By the time you actually NEED one of these it will be in the 150$ range; the only reason you need one now is the geek equivalent of penis envy
Re:Price differences (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Price differences (Score:2)
Re:Price differences (Score:2)
Pricewatch is sandbagging you about the price, due to the way that dealers are listing video cards. If you go to the actual search page [pricewatch.com] for that price quote, you'll see that the entire first page of results is for the Radeon 9700, not the 9700 Pro. Only at the very bottom of the second page of listings do you find an entry for the 9700 Pro, at $276 [gameve.com]. All of the lower-priced entries have phrases like "not 9700 pro" or "9700 pro also available" in the Product or Description fields. So the GF4 TI 4800, at $250, is $25 cheaper than the cheapest 9700 Pro. The Radeon is still the faster card, but it's not the cheaper card.
Re:Price differences (Score:2)
Re:Price differences (Score:2)
It's an artifact of the way the search engine works; all the cheaper entries, for the Radeon 9700 cards, have phrases like "not 9700 Pro" in either the product or description fields. What's happening is that Pricewatch's search engine isn't smart enough to parse English; it's just looking for records taht contain 'Radeon', '9700', and 'pro', and listing them in price order. Blame the government, which has enacted regulations that make the dealers put in disclaimers to protect themselves from idiot users who can't be bothered to read the product name and description, and then get bent out of shape with the dealer because they ordered and received a Radeon 9700 instead of the ultra-cheap 9700 Pro they thought they were ordering.
Actually... (Score:5, Informative)
From the time the Geforce2 came out until the Radeon 8500 came out 17 months ago, ATI had the unquestionable performance crown, but since then it has been juggling back and forth, which is to be expected since each new product release is about 6 months after the competitor's last release and the technology improves as time goes on. nVidia has a habit of shooting for a holiday release but not actually shipping until the new year, and ATI has made their last two releases in August. So when either one of them makes a new release they have a 6-month lead over the other company's product, so you should expect them to always trade performance crowns unless one of them is more than 6 months begind the other in R&D, which would be saying quite a lot.
Re:Actually... (Score:2)
well.. eh.. here's some info.
http://www.futuremark.com/community/halloffame/ [futuremark.com]
at all the lists this order is common:
--
5. ATI RADEON 8500/LE
6. NVIDIA GeForce3 Ti 500
--
as to 'came out months before' i don't actually know, and i don't even care.
the nvidia card that is priced like 8500le is gf4mx, which is just another mx joke as far as performance goes.
and 8500's are about the same price or cheaper than the few gf3's still for sale.
Re:Actually... (Score:2)
Hence Ti4200 > Radeon 8500 > Ti500
No "proof" needed, this is all known and documented data.
The initial 8500 drivers were dodgy though and they stopped it performing to it's best potential, so if you're thinking back to reviews when it was released you'd remember Ti500's outpacing it somewhat.
Open Source Suport (Score:3, Interesting)
Last time I checked, NVidia had an obnoxious policy of not releasing technical info for all the functionality of their cards. Is that still the case?
How is ATI regarding open source support? Can I run a fully powered video card from ATI without having to download special drivers directly from ATI, like I used to have to do with NVidia?
Re:Open Source Suport (Score:2)
Another poster commented that the same guy working on the nvidia driver for the 2.5 kernel is an intern at nvidia, so perhaps nvidia is coming around.
But it also raises the question: until open source drivers can run the full feature set of these cards why is this news? More interesting would be the best performing card using open source drivers only. Anybody know?
Re:Open Source Suport (Score:3, Informative)
Yeah, the best performing card using open source drivers only is the Radeon 8500.
See, ATI *does* release enough specifications for their cards for developers to create functional open-source 3D drivers. In addition, they release very stable, nearly 100% feature complete, binary only drivers for Linux.
As compared to nVidia which only does the latter, screwing you over if you only want to use open source 3D drivers.
Dinivin
BS (Score:3, Interesting)
Bullshit.
The Radeon drivers are as open as ATI could make them -- all the functions they had to keep closed for whatever pointy-haired reason are exported into a static lib, so that all the rest could be open-sourced. Want to compile them against a custom kernel such as Gentoo's? Sure, you can, the drivers are designed so that this is absolutely possible.
As for buggy, I own a 3rd party card built around an ATI chip, the worst-case scenario, and I would sincerely like to know what you mean by 'rather buggy'. Outside pure FUD, of course.
So cut them some slack. You like your nVidia card, it's cool, I'm happy for you. But if you don't reward companies that get out of their way to provide us minority Linux folks with good drivers, like ATI did, then you provide strictly no incentive for those companies to support us. So let's drop the dick^W GPU contest and stop peeing in the soup, hmm? Thank you.
Rant over.
Buy a 9500 Pro instead (Score:5, Informative)
and....
The 9700 Pro, 9700, and the 9500 Pro use the exact same GPU. So download a new bios at www.3dchipset.com/temp/warp11.zip [3dchipset.com] and you can overclock the GPU to get almost 90% of the performance of a 9700 Pro.
Read all about it here Firingsquad.com [gamers.com]
Also make sure to get DirectX 9 [microsoft.com]
and New Catalyst 3.0 Drivers [instacontent.net]
And the 9500 Pro is a cheap at $180 delivered.
www.pricewatch.com [pricewatch.com]
Re:Buy a GeForce 4 4400 instead (Score:2)
maybe, but the test resolution was 1024x768. I run my monitor at 1600x1200.
Check out these test results [gamers.com]. And these tests are with 8x anisotropic filtering and 4X AA. High stressing for any card.
The 9700 Pro, 9700, and 9500 Pro spank ALL the current nVidia cards at resolutions above 1024x768.
As for the "ATI's looks like crap" I'm not sure what you mean. ATi has always had the best picture. nVidia was always faster but not nearly the same quality picture.
And I pray that ATi has fixed their driver issues. I always hated that they updated their drivers every 6 months. But since the Catalyst 3.0 drivers were released so soon I have new hope.
Re:Buy a GeForce 4 4400 instead (Score:3, Informative)
However, you are going to see games that use the full DirectX 9.0 functionality over the next 12 months. That unfortunately means the GeForce4 Ti4xxx series cards are going to start bogging down on highly-complex backgrounds and 3-D effects from these new games. You'll want a card that support DX9 functionality in hardware like the ones that use the ATI R300 chipset (Radeon 9500 and above) and the ones that use the new nVidia GeForce FX chipset.
Not as far as OGL apps (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Not as far as OGL apps (Score:2)
The Quadro4 aren't consumer cards. The GF4 Ti series are stripped down versions of Quadro4 (more or less).
When you want good and fast performance in viewports, general consensus is nvidia.
Check out hardware forums on CGTalk and similar sites.
Ati Drivers Still Poor (Score:2)
Just a warning to those of you who (inexplicably) want to pay a gigantic premium for the fastest card on the market for about another quarter.
levine
ATI and bad drivers (Score:2, Interesting)
NVidia has always had top notch driver support, and they continue to support even the oldest TNT cards with driver updates. ATI tends to drop new driver support after a couple years.
I'm waiting for the GeForce FX. I just hope I can get one with dual DVI.
Radeon 9500 Pro (Score:3, Insightful)
High end 3D cards all but irrelevant (Score:5, Interesting)
First, PC video has gotten very fragmented in terms of capability. Hardware Transform & Lighting (T&L) first appeared in the GeForce 1 several years ago. The follow up, the GeForce 2 became a very popular, almost standard, card. But there are still major PC retailers that ship with motherboard video, such as Intel's extreme-whatsit and so on. These chipsets are not T&L capable. Still, several years after the first T&L cards appeared, there is a huge segment of the market that doesn't have hardware T&L. These are fast machines in every other respect (bottom end these days is 1.8GHz), just not T&L accelerated 3D.
Of course the hot video feature these days is programmable shader logic. But realistically what percentage of very capable PCs support this? 10%?
Second, the bottom has fallen out of 3D gaming on the PC. The sales figures of games that are perceived as Big Hits, like No One Lives Forever 2, are, in reality, abysmal. We're talking under 50,000 copies. There are some 3D games that are doing well, but it's a small, small handful. Just that "Oh yeah, what about Doom 3?" comes up in these discussions shows how weak the market is.
My point is that video cards keep improving, but at the same time, there's no market for these features, nor is there a market for the features of cards two generations back. I don't like this, but that doesn't change anything. Certainly it's fun to write shaders and to be able to buy something for $400 that's significantly better than $100,000 hardware from just a few years ago, but that's looking at the situtation from a "look at what I have in MY computer" perspective, not something I can realistically expect to be in most of the PCs out there.
Outlook a bit flawed, I think.... (Score:2)
Second thing you forget is that M$ is driving 3D into the mainstream with its DX initiatives--which basically means that someone using a GF2 and someone using a 9700P can run the same 3D program--the only requirement being that the hardware developer has written DX-compliant drivers. Of course the guy running the old 3D card won't get anything close to the performance and atmosphere of the guy running the 9700P, but he can still run the program, and that's what counts. Upgrading his 3D card is up to him. Those who like 3D games will buy these cards--those who don't, won't.
*chuckle* If everybody had to run 3D games prior to their being published we'd never have seen the first 3D game--so obviously that's not a requirement. 3D gaming software is just like any other--there's never a case where "everybody" buys it, no matter what it is. There are still tens of millions of people who are still running Windows 98, for instance. "Everybody" participating isn't required for an unqualified success in this market because the market is segmented.
That's my last point--you talk about videocard markets being segmented--that's because the market itself is segmented! Not everybody wants a 9700P, but millions of people do, and that's plenty enough demand to create a sizable market. Talking about fragmented--look at the automobile industry. It's extremely fragmented, but the market is so huge that companies make money anyway.
I guess it all boils down to the fact that "one size does not have to fit all" for markets to succeed and thrive. Indeed, the raw diversity of the American economy stuns people who experience it after the limitations of planned economies. They often find the amount of choice staggering.
There is a cohesion and a method to it all. APIs like DX and OpenGL are making it happen, along with the competitive efforts of hardware companies like nVidia and ATI. In another year or so you won't be able to buy a graphics accelerator, for any cost, that won't include a decent level of 3D acceleration--indeed, even ATI's current value line of videocards is OpenGL 2.0/DX9-compatible. The 3D card market is just like any other--higher end products get designed and built because there's a real demand for them.
Also, instead of looking at one 3D game--why not look at combined sales for all of them to judge the success of the market. People's tastes differ--I can't stand the "Sims", for instance, but many people love the games. Looking at the sales depth of a single 3D game will tell you little about the overall market.
In my system at home for instance I replaced a GF4 Ti4600 with a 9700P and couldn't be happier. I make use of the features of the product--especially its incredible fill rate and bandwidth which allow me to run older games faster than was possible before, along with stunning visual effects like FSAA and anisotropic filtering--which are applied by the driver and can be used with any 3D game. So even running older 3D software I can see a big difference between my former GF4 Ti4600 and the newer 9700P which I bought back in September. I feel very much as if I've gotten my money's worth.
Just to let you know there's another side of the coin here...
How many of us Linux Zealots (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:How many of us Linux Zealots (Score:2)
Re:How many of us Linux Zealots (Score:3, Insightful)
Sometimes you just need to bite the bullet and use the best tool for the job.
I hammered nails with an ice cream scooper once but once I realized it was much easier to use a hammer I only use the ice cream scooper for dishing out rocky road.
I'm not a fanboy, but... (Score:3, Informative)
ATI Rage Pro better than TNT ? what? (Score:3, Interesting)
As I recall the days when Quake 3 was getting ready to be released, the id guys specifically said that they were trying to really hard to make Q3 work on the ATI Rage Pro, and the way they were going about making it work was allowing the user to turn off enough eye candy (ie remove enough features) so that the game would be compatible with the Rage Pro. The end result was that it looked rather ugly. On the other hand, as far as I know, the TNT1, although probably too slow to play Q3 feasibly, could support full eye candy, including 32-bit color.
I actually played the game on a TNT2 for a while, which, I believe, had the same features as the TNT1 with a speed boost.
Now if you are talking about quake1 benchmarks or something, I don't know which card would've been faster (rage pro or tnt1) but let's face it, there's more to video cards than just high framerates, as 3dfx found out (the hard way).
The Wages of Sin (Score:3, Funny)
This has been Elmer Fudd weporting. We now weturn you to your wegular newscast.
The speed doesn't matter if the drivers suck (Score:4, Insightful)
ATI cards are just not good for gamers. While Nvidia focuses on speed and stability, ATI focuses on cramming any possible feature they can into their All-In-Wonder cards, at the cost of a decent driver set for people who want a card that just attaches to a CRT and WORKS. I will NEVER buy another ATI card, and I will always remember why I ran all my systems on Nvidia for five years before screwing up and getting this fucking ATI card.
Must be something whacked somewhere ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, this is the second motherboard I've used the card with--the first was an MSI KT333 chipset board, my current board is a nVidia-based nForce2 chipset board manufactured by Chaintech, which supports AGP x8 and several other things. The card runs extremely well. I've not even been tempted to swap cards with the wife and go back to the nVidia Ti4600 product--no way...
I would strongly suggest that either you have some underlying system incompatiblity of which you are unaware which prohibits the card from working properly--or else you simply had the bad luck to pick up a defective card (in which case an RMA is order.) Your experience is certainly not representative of that of the reviewer of the article on which this thread is based, none of the other reviews of the product (and there have been dozens of them), or my direct personal experience. Think how you like but I thought you should know your experience is anything but typical.
Oops (Score:2)
Anyway, for 3dsmax and such apps, I would still stick to nvidia Quadro and softquadroed Geforce cards.
Re:Oops (Score:2)
Re:Do the Linux drivers work yet? (Score:4, Informative)
grab the latest drivers...it was just a glitch in the first release.
or you could always flash the bios of your OEM card with the firmware from a retail card..
Re:This is 9700 Pro, not 9700.. (Score:2)
Matrox (Score:2)
If I had the cash, I'd be playing my games on three monitors [matrox.com]... which is supposed to work nicely on the matrox dual-head cards.
Re:Wait and see (Score:2, Informative)
Also, while the NV30/GeForceFX may beat the R300/Radeon 9700, I'd be surprised if ATI doesn't release a R350 based card (Radeon 9900?) close to the launch of the GeForceFX. ATI's lower end cards (such as the 9500 PRO) will continue to beat the GF4TI series in price and performance.