High End Silent Cooling For Graphics Cards 199
SpinnerBait writes "With all the competition these days in the 3D Accelerator market, Graphics
Card OEMs are doing anything they can to differentiate their products in a sea
of competitive solutions. Recently board designs are getting even more
exotic, with brightly colored PCBs, high end heat sink and fan combinations and
even flashing lights for the case modders out there. However, a relatively
new trend is Quiet Computing.
HotHardware has an article up that showcases two new Radeon 9600 Pro and 9800
Pro cards from Sapphire Tech, that have rather impressive fanless coolers on
them that are virtually silent. Great stuff for those of you gaming in the
library."
What would excite me is a lower price (Score:5, Interesting)
IS IN EXPENSIVE!
Imagine that graphics card marketing departments. Keep your fluff and give me a lower cost card!
Of other note, a card shardard for laptops so I could upgrade my PowerBook G4 would be huge for me, expecially as laptops become the PC of choice for the younger, more mobile 20 somethings.
Re:What would excite me is a lower price (Score:2, Informative)
Re:What would excite me is a lower price (Score:1, Informative)
Re:What would excite me is a lower price (Score:3, Informative)
Why was this reply modded down to 0:Troll? The parent asked for cheap graphics cards; this guy explained where to get one. A question was asked and answered. How is that a troll?
I also bought a GeForce 4 MX from Newe
Quit yer whining (Score:1)
$69 - RADEON 9100 128MB
$61 - RADEON 9100 64MB
$74 - RADEON 9000 Pro 128MB
$67 - RADEON 9000 Pro 64MB
$46 - RADEON 9000
$61 - RADEON 9000 128MB
$46 - RADEON 9000 64MB
$64 - RADEON 8500
$40 - RADEON 7500
$55 - RADEON 7500 128MB
$30 - RADEON 7000
$59 - RADEON 64MB DDR VIVO
$30 - RADEON 32MB DDR
The lameness filter thinks, I should add some more . But I think the list above about covers it. Apparently There's still more to type so here goes:
Re:What would excite me is a lower price (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? The chipset designers(ati/nV) try to create one entry for each segment without too much overlap WRT pricing and performace between segments. No one is going to produce cards with older technology when they can use that manufacturing capacity to build other, newer, more profitable cards. Once production has ramped up it never gets cheaper to produce the cards. It does not cost any more to produce a top end card today than it would be to build a Voodoo3.
Re:What would excite me is a lower price (Score:1)
Re:What would excite me is a lower price (Score:3, Informative)
ATI with the new ATI Mobility GPUs are pushing a standard interface for being upgradeable.
It is up to the manufacturers to take advantage of using this interface though, so with Apple, cross your fingers.
In the PC world, there are a couple of manufacturers that are already supporting the ATI GPU with the upgradeable in
GeForce FX 5200 is cheaper, as quiet, but weaker (Score:2)
It also runs ok under Mandrake 9.1, though you have to use the text install.
Note that the passively cooled is plain old FX 5200, not FX 5200 ultimate, which has a buzzy fan.
Jon Acheson
Re:What would excite me is a lower price (Score:2)
Now if you want the bleeding edge to be cheap, well, you're in the wrong market. Modern PC graphics performance is largely driven by gaming enthusiasts with substantial disposable income. As in people who are quite willing to spend $500 on a video card every yea
Re:What would excite me is a lower price (Score:2)
There are plenty of very low-cost cards... What is your problem?
Just quickly browsing pricewatch, I find:
1MB PCI generic card for $4
8MB AGP S3 Savage card for $11
Same as above with TV-out for $12
4MB AGP SIS card for $13
4MB PCI Matrox card for $5
16MB PCI NVidia TNT2 for $20
So why do you say videocards are too expensive? You want the top of the line but expect to get it for $20?
Umm I dunno ... (Score:1, Redundant)
Sacrificing a PCI slot?? (Score:3, Interesting)
I always thought in some computers the AGP slot and the 1st PCI slot had a shared IRQ, so this wouldn't be an issue...unless im mistaken, of course
Re:Sacrificing a PCI slot?? (Score:2, Informative)
It's definately a must have for my mobo in the future.
Re:Sacrificing a PCI slot?? (Score:1)
Re:Sacrificing a PCI slot?? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Sacrificing a PCI slot?? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Sacrificing a PCI slot?? (Score:2)
To echo other posters, though, who needs to use all the other PCI slots on their board? I have one for my SCSI RAID setup, one for my NIC, and that's it (I'm runnin
silent fans but noisy games.... (Score:2)
Re:silent fans but noisy games.... (Score:1)
Tom
Re:silent fans but noisy games.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:silent fans but noisy games.... (Score:1)
"Well, there's this huge loud swooshing noise, what else could it be?" stated one officer.
Re:silent fans but noisy games.... (Score:3, Interesting)
I was surprised that when I was testing an ASUS V9520 Video Suite at work, the fan didn't spin until I started playing ga... err running benchmarks. I thought I broke the fan
This is news? (Score:5, Funny)
I glad this is happening.. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I glad this is happening.. (Score:1)
Not as great as you might think (Score:3, Interesting)
I think that NVidia were actually on the right track by blowing out the GPU heat into the outside air rather than into the case. Of course, their fan was a monster, but I imagine that this could be done better with a cooler GPU like ATI's.
Re:Not as great as you might think (Score:3, Interesting)
the key imo is watercooling for high-end cards, and generating less heat for the mid/low-end cards. AFAIK some
The real future (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.directron.com/fanless.html
It's a Zalman case that is coming soon. It will cost a lot - but the entire case acts as a big heatsink. They claim it can easily cool the hottest GPU & CPU's out there, assuming your PC room isn't a furnace, I presume.
Here's a japanese link verifying Zalman as the people behind it. http://www.watch.impress.co.jp/akiba/hotline/2003
This is the holy grail for silent computing enthusiasts!
Re:The real future (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The real future (Score:2)
Re:The real future (Score:2)
I am fine with my current arrangement, I have a relatively quiet computer, sitting on some carpet, under a desk with accoustical panels behind it.
I don't have a graphics card with a fan on it though.
Re:Not as great as you might think (Score:2)
Re:Not as great as you might think (Score:2)
Umm, yea, and that's what most cards DO!
Nvidia may have been on the right track, but then their card produces MASSIVE quantities of heat. ATI doesn't get that hot (comparitivly speaking)
Re:Not as great as you might think (Score:2)
Or better case design. Take for example Apple's new G5 [apple.com]. Apple made sure that the case has multiple zones with independent temperature controlled fans than can spin at lower RPM's depending upon the heat load. Of course this means you have more fans, but overall the system is much quieter.
Re:Not as great as you might think (Score:2)
As compared to a fan, which blows magic pixie dust on the heat to make it go away.
Notice, by the way, where that heat pipe sends some of the heat from the GPU. It transfers it to the large heatsink on the "bottom" of the card. In a standard case, the "bottom" of the AGP video card is closer to the rear
Virtually silent? (Score:4, Insightful)
Care to explain how graphic cards with no fans, no moving parts at all are virtually silent? The cooling solution is totally passive, and thus makes no noice at all.. if it does, something went very, very wrong and it's probably the sound of the heavy cooling solution breaking your motherboard or graphic card
Re:Virtually silent? (Score:2, Informative)
Come on mods! (Score:2)
I too am left wondering what sort of noise this card generates. I had expected a heatsink without a fan to be completely silent. Why is this "virtually silent"?
Typical lifespan? (Score:1)
I run my boxes 24x7 and it seems that in a dusty environment - such as my appartment - all fans need to be replaced every year or so.
This liquid-in-a-pipe concept seems like it might be a solution for my problem.
Re:Typical lifespan? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think you just answered your own question. :-) In my experiance fans are _the_ most unreliable components in my systems. I'm using quality fans now and I've replace all fans on my GFX cards with heatsinks.
I imagine that a heat pipe would last much much longer than any fan. For a start they have almost no moving parts (well, no fiction really), and most of all no _exposed_ moving parts. (The pipe contains a liquid that moves/pumps heat by changing to a gas and back again.)
--
Simon
Re:Typical lifespan? (Score:2)
That's odd. Maybe you need to look for better fans? My case (through 2 upgrades since its original 500Mhz installation) still has the original fans and only now one of them is starting to rattle (just add oil). I smoke, and live quite a filthy lifestyle where vacuuming and dusting was a fad. It's probably been 3 or more years and they still work just fine, after removing the wads of dusty from the fan grill. I might suspect maybe the stability of the power fe
Re:Typical lifespan? (Score:2)
--
Simon
Nothing to see here (Score:5, Insightful)
The only thing that really makes this significant, is that if it comes with the card you can't void your warranty by placing something "too heavy" on it.
What about the rest of the computer? (Score:4, Insightful)
I know that some people spend their fortunes on quiet powersupplies and sound insulation and these cards might be what they're looking for, but for the most part they're a small nieche market.
Re:What about the rest of the computer? (Score:2)
Re:What about the rest of the computer? (Score:3, Interesting)
For around $150 total, the improvement was pretty dramatic. The only sound I hear from my box now is the hard drive, and if that ev
Re:What about the rest of the computer? (Score:2)
HD's these days are amazingly quiet. PSU's don't tend to be that loud. CPU's and GPU's are the two hottest components in most systems, and GPU's tend to be squeezed into very tight areas, meaning their fans are often rather powerful to offset the small heatsink. Consequently, GPU coolers on modern GFX cards can be one of, if not THE loudest parts of a sy
Re:What about the rest of the computer? (Score:2)
Re:What about the rest of the computer? (Score:2)
I've slept near some noisy computers for a long time, but I'm a very deep sleeper, and even I am now incredibly annoyed by the sound of a PC. After a few years, even the most plesant sound can get on your nerves. But more than that, I'm getting annoyed because new computers produce an order of magnitude more heat than older computers, meaning much much louder cooling solutions. To make things worse, cheaper cooling products are much louder t
Re:What about the rest of the computer? (Score:2)
I still prefer to make the computer as noisy as it needs to be, locate the box in a closet or another room, and run the cables out to the mouse/keyboard/monitor. Problem solved.
Enough! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't even know where to begin. (Score:3, Interesting)
And 80% of games are in 2 dimensions. What's your point?
I realize this statistic is fictitious and was hastily pulled from my ass; so was yours.
Most PC applications don't require much more than a 300 MHz CPU and 96 MB of system RAM. What's your point?
HDTV is being pushed as a standard but most people don't even have S-Video inputs on their televisions. What's your point?
Some people like technology. Some people like quality better, speed faster, a
Re:Enough! (Score:2, Insightful)
Wow! Individual thought! Whod'a thunk it?
Re:Enough! (Score:2)
You might as well say that cigarette smokers don't have any right to complain about pollution...
But, besides the point, I happen to HATE hot computer components... Only a small part of that is environmental (appropriate, since they only do a small bit, if any, environmental damage) and I don't buy any videocards that run so hot they need a fan... Hey, guess what,
What about... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What about... (Score:2)
A dry computer?
Re:What about... (Score:2)
Re:What about... (Score:2)
Not completely silent, but 29dBA isn't that far off.
Re:What about... (Score:2)
I still wouldn't want to do it though... I, like the great grandparent, am very wary of having water cursing through my computer.
Re:What about... (Score:4, Funny)
Water molecule #38572039471928372: "God damn it - time to cool the fucking CPU again. Why the hell doesn't that piece of shit stop putting out so much fucking heat? Jesus."
Same old Zalman cooler (Score:3, Informative)
Well look what we got here. (Score:1)
Let's get serious on quiet (Score:3, Insightful)
I am bloody sick of loud ass hard drives and fans and everything else. The fans are no big deal but the hard drives are the real problem.
I've yet to see a hard drive that doesn't scream like a small dog in pain. That noise goes through your head like a bayonet.
I'm building a huge cabinet to put *ALL* of my equipment in made out of an old soda water cooler from a drive in store. It's sound proof and thermally it will keep the heat in so I can duct it out through the ceiling, thus keeping the computer room cool and saving money on the AC cooling bill. It gets damn hot with all the PC's and laserjets and stuff running..
Let's get some quiet hard drives too folks..
I'm really sick of noisy machines. I'd even like to have a silent fridge if they make one..
Re:Let's get serious on quiet (Score:2)
Western Digital 800 (80GB) special ed is silent. I cannot hear it at all.
On a related note, congratulations on the superpower. Let me be the first to dub you "Sight For Sore Ears Man."
Re:Let's get serious on quiet (Score:5, Informative)
There are some good drives these days that are very quiet. Seagate Barracuda series drives are legendary among the Quiet PC crowd. Although other manufacturers are also bringing out quiet drives.
If you really want a silent computer you might as well get some information:
How to Quiet the Thing [7volts.com]
Silent PC Review [silentpcreview.com]
--
Simon
Re:Let's get serious on quiet (Score:4, Informative)
You could save a lot of effort and just build a quiet PC. In my experience it's a lot cheaper and easier to eliminate noise by the careful selection of noise generating components rather than building large enclosures. Enclosures you might think would block noise can often actually *amplify* it by acting like a horn or resonator.
Anyways... Here are my current picks for a quiet PC:
Overclocking: Don't
CPU Heatsink: Heatsinks change so fast that giving you specific models is pointless. However, as a general rule, if it comes with it's own fan, chances are it's too freakin' loud. Stock HSF combo's from Intel and AMD are right out. Look for a hefty heatsink with a lot of surface area made out of a conductive metal like copper. You can find heat dissipation spec's for most heatsinks online. Odds are you will have to spend 50 bucks or so here, but it's one place not to cheap out. Don't forget to use thermal paste when you install it!
CPU Fan: If you have a good heatsink installed properly you won't need a freakin' hoover to keep your CPU running cool. The minimum ammount of airflow you'll need is going to depend on how much heat your CPU generates and how well your heatsink dissipates heat. I've found that even a 20CFM (cubic feet per minute) fan will do well even on a high end athlon if you have the right heatsink. For comparison, some stock fans do upwards of 120CFM.
Graphics Card Cooling: Go passive. Buy a card with a passive cooler or replace the fan. Those little wussy fans they put on graphics card may look innocuous, but many are cheap pieces of crap that will develop a high-pitched and loud whine in short order. Cheap fans, no matter how small, are the bane of silent computing.
Motherboard Cooling: Ditto. If it has a fan, replace it with a heatsink or don't buy it in the first place. The latter is my personal choice.
Hard-Drives: Once I would have written pages on suspension techniques, enclosures, network booting, etc. to tell you how to avoid noisy hard-drives. Now I can just tell you to buy Seagate Barracuda's. While other manufacturers are closing the gap, these suckers still have a hefty 6dB lead on anything WD has, and a wider lead for any other manufacturer.
Case Fans: Guess what. 20CFM fans are all you need here too. I usually have one blow into the case over the hard-drives and another blow out of the case by the CPU cooler, but there are other configurations you can use. The key thing here it to pick high-quality quiet fans. I swear by 20CFM Panaflo's. Three of them (2 case fans, 1 CPU fan) will not be audible over even a very quiet PSU. These fans are about $15 CAD, so aren't bank breakers either. You can get fans that move more air, but don't bother unless you find you need that extra airflow. If you do, add more low-CFM fans to work in parallel rather than installing high-CFM fans. Note that Panaflo makes other 80mm fans with more airflow, but they are much louder. Stick with the 20CFM fanss.
Power Supply Units: If you've built the rest of your machine properly, the fans in your PSU will be the *only* thing you normally hear. I consider PSU's to be the one item that is lagging behind the rest out there. You can pay a fortune for a fanless PSU such as those TK Power makes, or you can buy a PSU with too much fan noise. Things are getting better though. Antec's Truepower PSU's are high-quality units that are pretty quiet and are also very affordable. They're lightyears ahead of anything Enermax makes anyways. I'd try one of them out first and see if it's too loud for you before resorting to more extreme measures. After that, you can try opening up the PSU and modding the fans to run on lower voltage or use different fans. If all else fails, you can go fanless, but it will cost you bigtime!
Water-cooling: Since the PSU in a system built under these guidelines is all you'll hear, if you aren't willing to watercool your PSU then there's no point to it at all. Watercooled PSU's have yet to go mainstream, so this is heavy modding territory. I have encountered many watercooling systems where the water-pump alone is noisier than three of my systems. Watercooling isn't where it's at... yet. It may be the future though.
Re:Let's get serious on quiet (Score:2)
Western Digital hard drives seem to be significantly quieter than the same generation Maxtor hard drives.
Also, the newer the hard drive, the quieter they seem to be... My old 6.4 GB Maxtor HDD sounds like a small tin chainsaw... Meanwhile, my 100GB Western Digital harddrive is very very quiet.
Also, you can do quite a bit about the noise as well, other than improving the components. What I do is to place towers on the floor, under
So the news is... (Score:1)
Um... yeah.
I'm going back to bed, wake me if anything worth knowing happens.
Why would I want to make LESS noise? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Why would I want to make LESS noise? (Score:2)
Lemme guess, you start your computer with a gas engine, complete with ripcord, like a lawnmower right?
Re:Why would I want to make LESS noise? (Score:2)
Slashdot moderators remain completely devoid of the ability to evaluate a post. Film at 11
Re:Why would I want to make LESS noise? (Score:2)
For DIYers on a budget (Score:5, Interesting)
Just take any old stock AMD or P4 heatsink and chop it in half. I didn't have proper heatsink fasteners on my card so drilled it out and zip tied it down. The bottom is still smooth and the paste was properly applied.
The only problem was getting the stock fan off as it was glued on. I put my card in a ziplock bag
and chucked it in the freezer for half an hour. Then I used a screwdriver to pry off the fan assembly (with an old library card to protect the pcb).
Check it out (it's not a swiss watch but it gets the job done).
Pic 1: http://fullcircletraining.com/images/quiet1.jpg [fullcircletraining.com]
Pic 2: http://fullcircletraining.com/images/quiet2.jpg [fullcircletraining.com]
You can see I did the same thing to the northbridge on the motherboard.
happy modding.
j.
virtually silent? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:virtually silent? (Score:2)
Re:virtually silent? (Score:2)
It's not just a large block of aluminium: There's liquid in parts of the cooler. I sure hope it is also completely silent, too. What really matters is that there are no mechanical pieces involved, so your point remains valid.
Fan reliability (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Fan reliability (Score:3, Informative)
1: The G4 cube is nowhere near "totally silent" for one reason: hard drive noise. The only reason we don't hear the spinning in most PCs is because of the fans.
2: HDD noise will decrease over time; I have two Samsung Spinpoint P40 drives which have a DSP designed to reduce seek noise. So the objective should be to make fan noise less loud than the HDD spin noise. Many of the HP Compaq workstations accomplish this with quiet, thermally managed fans.
So, completely passive cooling is nice. Heck,
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Because my workstation is my server as well. OS X gives me the possibility of having one workstation run all of my *nix code, along with Photoshop, Office, IDL, Multispec, Safari, Mail, Keynote, etc...etc..etc... at the same time as functioning as a rather competent server all in a plug and play environment with a nice GUI on top.
Re:Fan reliability (Score:2)
Some cases though are designed with airflow in mind, and when you have the case open it screws up that airflow and temperatures can actually increase. Though I haven't seen increases of more than a couple of degrees, YMMV.
Future Cooling? (Score:2)
The FX-5900 must use less power since they were able to ditch the giant cooler.
Any idea on the type of power consumption that would mandate something beyond air cooling?
brightly colored PCBs? (Score:2, Funny)
I wonder what these casemodders are going to do for lifestyle status symbolism when personal computing devices finally shrink out of sight over the next decade? Paint their smartcards with glow-in-the-dark paint? Have the OLED display woven into the back of their shirt display the SETI@Home screensaver with a message like "345,000 work units complete, beeyatches!"?
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nothing is quieter than ice cubes (Score:3, Funny)
Totally silent.
Usually then my system crashes and goes down for a day or so and during that time it almost never overheats.
Pretty efficient if you ask me.
Does someone remember the quiet Hercules 64KB? (Score:2, Interesting)
I mean the whole computer world has evolved, into GPU's that are faster than CPU's 12 months old, using big smart busses (128, 256 even 512 bits), using DDR3 technology...
I had a XT, and i spent almost the same daily hours playing that i currently spend today... is just me or is the same but bigger, faster and stronger?
For those interested in weird cooling solutions (Score:2)
Tom's Hardware Review (Score:3, Informative)
I'm not impressed with sapphire's build quality (Score:3, Interesting)
I bought one of these for my GF3 and found the kit well made, and easy to install. Overall a good setup.
I later bought a Sapphire 9700 Pro Ultimate Edition with a ZM80 pre-installed (just like the cards above). The heat synch was improperly aligned, the conduction tube was bent away from the sync and almost NO thermal compound was evident between the tube and the heat sync plates. (Zalman's install instructions stress the importance of maximizing contact area between the plates and the tube)
I WOULD buy another ZM80, but I wouldn't buy another sapphire card with one pre installed.
IMO stay away from these cards. buy a regular version, and install a passive cooler yourself.
Actually there's little competition (Score:3, Insightful)
The vast majority of consumer PCs ship with one of the following:
1. Intel Extreme Graphics 2 (a motherboard chipset roughly equivalent to a TNT2).
2. GeForce 4 MX (essentially GeForce 2 with more fillrate, but without programmable shaders).
The little bit of competition is all at rather small high-end of the market, with nVidia and ATI out diddling each other by a few percent every couple of months. Hardware fanboys excepted, this is uninteresting.
Re:Actually there's little competition (Score:2)
1. Intel Extreme Graphics 2 (a motherboard chipset roughly equivalent to a TNT2).
2. GeForce 4 MX (essentially GeForce 2 with more fillrate, but without programmable shaders).
Latest Mercury numbers indicate that Intel has under 30% graphics market share, and nVidia's integrated solution adds another 9% (half of the total AMD market). Vast majority? It's not even majority!
Look around for data to confirm things you hear from others before you
Re:Actually there's little competition (Score:2)
The GeForce 4 MX is not "nVidia's integrated solution." Sorry. It's the bottom-end card from nVidia that's the default in almost all machines from Dell.
On the Subject of Sapphire Cards (Score:4, Interesting)
It may have not come with a fancy heavy heat sink, but it sure heated up to the point of automatic self-destruction pretty well without much prompting from myself. Needless to say, it was pretty dissapointing.
When I got the replacement in the mail I had to cool it with a smaller house fan until I went out and purchased a pci fan and placed it RIGHT NEXT to it.
So, no wonder they're pushing these big cooling rigs.......
Re:On the Subject of Sapphire Cards (Score:2)
If they want to push anything, they should push devices that run a LOT cooler (even if they are more expensive). Forget about global warming, I'm concerned with home warming... I don't want my house to be 150F degrees just because I leave my computer running.
No wonder Apple is doing so well.
I have one in my system! (Score:2, Interesting)
The mainstay was getting a silent case(Antec Sonata-Highly recomended) and powersupply. The case has some sound reducing material in the front and a quiet power supply. Using a large heat sink on the processor and a low RPM fan i keep my CPU very cool. I put the Zalman VGA cooler on my 9500 pro and it not only runs great, but actually it also runs cooler.
The only case fan i have is a larg
Not really having to do with Gfx Cards... (Score:2)
Did anyone else notice that you had to log in to see the ads?
Re:whoo pie... (Score:2)
old and boring news, move along people...
The sad part is that heat pipe technology has been used in laptops for a LONG time now, and quite effectively for CPU and GPU cooling.
It is strange the the desktop board manufacturers are just now finding them to be an asset.
My Geforce4 440 laptop is virtually silent 99.9% of the time, and even when it hits load and heat increases,
Re:Too bad ATI doesn't support linux (Score:2)
Shit company, shit people, shit product
Actually, there was no competing... Microsoft killed off any chance of NVidia being in the XBOX2 after NVidia tried to milk them for more money when console prices dropped.
(After Microsoft had giving NVidia a ton of cash to develop the next generation Geforce GPU technology that they not only used in the XBOX, but got to package and put the the technology in the Geforce3 and future versions.)
Like I sa
Re:Good luck getting anything above 7200 runnning (Score:2)
Ok, and this anger is coming from what stock loss?
I have used both ATI and NVidia for many years.
Why ATI has 'respect' is they were one of the first companies to offer a low cost 'graphics accelerated' video card with the ATI Vantage back in 1991 that supported 8bit accelerated video and was a low cost alternative to the IBM 8514 XVGA accelerated standard at the time.
Back when NVidia was, well, what were they
Re:ATI state of linux support (Score:2)