Really? So these are no better than the 5770 (and it's rebranded sibling, the 6770)? At all? Because that's what they're replacing -- NOT the 6850, or 6870, or 6950, or 6970. Until you realize this, you're just spouting nonsense and comparing entirely unrelated product lines.
Last year's TOP END television may still do things better than today's brand new midrange television -- and likely do it at a lower cost so long as you don't mind it being already a year old. Does that make the new midrange device less competent or marketable? Nope.
Increased compute performance doesn't benefit current games (except for BF3 and a few others), but as DX11 API gets used more, we will see more games using DirectCompute for their lighting (deferred lighting) and post processing (screen space ambient occlusion, antialiasing, etc). Later we will surely see many more algorithms moving to GPU, so the performance gap will become even wider in the future. Middle class GCN based hardware is a more future proof choice than 6850. It might be on par when running existing DX9/DX10 games, but in the future games (and with the future drivers) it will outperform the old architecture by a wide margin.
46% faster LuxMark score is one indication that future lighting pipeline runs much faster on a hardware that is designed for computate workloads.
So then, you just rehash the same argument for every video card release? Because that's basically what you've stated, albeit in more words. Let's be specific: not much has really changed for NVIDIA since Fermi was released back in the G80 days. Logically, I should assume that your lamblasting of prior versions of the same architecture when the new MSRP of the new part somehow exceeds the devalued pricepoint of the former top-end part exists equally between vendors. It should therefore be a trivial matter to search for your prior posts lamenting NVIDIA's similar treatment of prior releases.
Interestingly, I find no such lamenting over similar NV foibles.
Just saying in general, AMD needs something that replicates that.
http://ht4u.net/reviews/2012/amd_radeon_hd_7700_test/index4.php?dummy=&advancedFilter=true&prod[]=AMD+Radeon+HD+5770+%2F+HD+6770&prod[]=AMD+Radeon+HD+7770+%40+5770+Takt&filter[0][]=1920&filter[2][]=4&filter[3][]=16&aa=all
Shifting the goalposts now? Fine, here's mine: HD7770 uses ~45 watts less than GTX 460 (~55 watts if you look at the 1GB GTX 460) (based on average power consumption from http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/HIS/HD_7750_7770_CrossFire/21.html). It's not even a contest.
You keep shouting that devalued stuff a lot, but 6850 has been at 149$ for some time now and didn't even start much higher. Give me some examples where AMD or nVidia has in the past released a card that is more expensive and slower than their old card, preferably an example where the it's not some firesale of few last units.
8600GTS versus 7950GT is an old example, however that was the last time NV made an architecture change. Fermi hasn't changed much since then. GCN is not the same architecture as the prior VLIW models, so your comparison is about as relevant as Fermi was to the G7x cores.
It's the price that matters and I don't think anyone can honestly argue that the 77xx series is well positioned versus its 2.5 year old forbears. The lower power consumption doesn't even come close to compensating for that. In fact that's expected from a new process.
On the other hand I don't blame AMD at all for setting the prices that they have if they think the cards will still sell well. It's time for them to make some money.
Strange yes. Tahiti manages 2 tris/clock without tesselation if culled or not but falls back to below 1 tri/clock unculled with tesselation. At least Cape Verde (being limited to 1 tri/clock anyway) has absolutely no problem there and beats GTX 460 7 polymorph engines every day of the week .Hardware.fr: http://www.hardware.fr/articles/855-8/performances-theoriques-geometrie.html
The scaling of tessellation performance from Cape Verde to Tahiti looks a kind of worse (@ no/low culling)?
I don't think the chip is disappointing, though pricing certainly leaves something to be desired.Yeh, Cape Verde is disappointing, but I think/hope pitcairn is where the goodies will be. At least now we know March 6 is the date.
Asymmetric CUs are bizarre. But the "die shot" we've already seen rules out 12 CUs.I'm totally surprised they went with the asymmetric CUs though I guess that will further fuel the speculation about the chip being 12 CUs .
Actually I should have said "asymmetric CU groups". But I guess those CU groups really are little more than some structure to save some complexity by sharing some caches.Asymmetric CUs are bizarre. But the "die shot" we've already seen rules out 12 CUs.
Have they shown some graph saying they're asymmetric? They could just aswell have just 5 CU's in there behind 1 setup pipe?I'm totally surprised they went with the asymmetric CUs though I guess that will further fuel the speculation about the chip being 12 CUs .