Jawed said:It seems that unmatched quad capabilities are turned off, e.g. a 4 quad master working with a 3 quad slave will be reduced to a 3 quad master.
So bang goes all those hours spent speculating over asymmetric quad supertiling schemes.
Note - I don't understand German - this is from the translation
Jawed
Bummer
DSC said:Anyone noticed the price for the X850 Crossfire Edition card as suggested by ATI? $549.... Sander wasn't wrong after all.
And notice you can't use a X850 CE with a X800 non CE cards. Or vice versa, so much for the myth of Crossfire being more flexible.
SLI: can't use 6800 Ultra with 6800 GT or vanilla
Crossfire: can use X850XT master with X850 Pro or vanilla
DemoCoder said:Didn't some people hack Nvidia SLI to work on non-SLI motherboards by putting the second card in a PCIe x1 slot? Seems that it is not fundamentally limited to nForce MBs, but this is merely an NV driver decision to force people to buy nForce. A future driver rev could make NVidia SLI work on other chipsets. From an astract standpoint, I don't really see why the MB chipset needs to provide any support at all beyond the PCIe spec itself.
I know that there was a hack with early DFI boards to make Ultra chips run as SLI; this was because they had two x16 size lanes anyway for their own wierd-ass 16+2 configuration thing, and the early Ultra chips from nVidia were just SLI chips with a couple of bridges cut. Apply the old graphite pencil trick and bam, SLI. I imagine nVidia have since moved these bridges to a more inaccessible position, ie inside the chip, but have no evidence for this. Haven't seen reports of plugging cards into 1x slots, and would be interested in more info. Either way, if part of the hack involves closing said bridges then it would imply that SLI-specific hardware is still being utilised in these cases.