But can it fold?
mine's the one with the nVidia shopping list in the pocket.
AMD has released a pair of new graphics cards based on its 28-nanometer "Graphics Core Next" (GCN) architecture, humbly dubbing them as being "engineered for supremacy." "The AMD Radeon HD 7800 series offers more than the just world's most advanced graphics," AMD's GPU Division headman said in a statement, "it offers the …
considering overclockers only stock the 7970 and 7950 where do these show up as arent they older cards?
they might be the 'fastest cards' but if the drivers are shite then whats the point. never AMD again for me. they make great hardware but their driver guys suck, bigtime. a less powerful nvidia 99% of the time will get better results.
not really. i bought a top of the line AMD card last year. so many issues. the devs just run through simulations to see how the driver fare, nvidia actually seem to play the game and see the problem.
the same games and the nvidia outperformed the AMD card by some margin, even though it had a lower spec.
the game devs were banging their heads against the wall with AMD while nvidia bent over backwards with performance increases.
I had no end of problems with stability when my machine was new - and it was the first ATI card I'd used for a long, long time ... and yup, I blamed the shonky ATI drivers as well, at first... until I tinkered with everything a bit to try and peg down the instability.
Wasn't actually ATIs fault at all but my own (or Overclockers, take your pick) the overclock on the CPU was just a wee bit too much too be really stable but it only showed up when being hammered by games... once I'd turned it down a bit everything was hunky-dory and my (now ageing) ATI card has taken everything I've thrown at it (including X3:AP).
Since AMD took over they seem to have been giving some love to the ATI drivers and Catalyst software - I'd say the choice between nVidia and AMD now can't be made entirely on driver/software stability.
Perhaps you should try pulling you head out of your backside and read the article.
Plus: ATI (AMD) drivers have been very good since a short time after AMD buying ATI, and the release of the HD3850 cards. The linux drivers took a little longer, but so what! It's not like there are any games on Linux that need state of the art gaming graphics cards.
@"Perhaps you should try pulling you head out of your backside and read the article...."
another internet hard man hiding behind AC... how brave.
my last AMD card was a 6990 and it was shite for any opengl games. it was on a win7 machine. basically their drivers basically killed off the game Brink as many AMD users were getting worse FPS than with much older cards. in fact my nvidia 8800 outperformed it by some margin and that card was 5 years older. check the Brink forums and AMD responses to see how well they did.
it was all down to an apparent fudge of their opengl implementation, which nvidia were fine with.
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>"the 7870 has a GCN-based engine with 20 compute units and 80 texture units, while the 7850 has 16 compute units and 64 texture units. The other clear difference is in price: $349 for the 7870 and $249 for the 7850."
So, 40% more cost for only 25% more silicon? Huh.