Hey chaps,
Seeing as this place is ripe for discussion about 3D industry + website stuff, I thought I'd throw this one out there and see what people think. I'd go and post this as a question on the Hexus forums, but I'm actually IP-banned, for some bizarre reason.
Anyways, the question is concerning the new ECS CrossFire mainboard. Does it have VGA or no? And which version of the chipset is it using? And what version is being reviewed on Hexus?
ECS have announced that the final, shipping CrossFire board will use the RD400X chipset and WILL NOT have integrated graphics. Pre-production boards - one of which we currently have in the bit-tech labs to play with - DO have integrated graphics, with a VGA port on the back, and use the RD400 chipset (no X).
ECS sent me this, which I present just to back up the above paragraph:
Now I know that ECS don't actually have finished production boards in Britain yet. So I was surprised to see the Hexus review of the board labelled as coming with the RD400X chipset, and without the VGA port listed in the spec. The review is written without any mention of a pre-production unit - all of these things rather indicating they had tested with a finished, retail board.
The pertinent Hexus review page is here: http://www.hexus.net/content/item.php?item=3683&page=3
However, if you look at page 2 of that article, the picture of the board (the only one in the whole review) clearly has a VGA port in the top left.
Further, ECS mailed me thus:
To me, this raises a number of issues.
1) Should reviews of pre-production boards be conducted at all? What use is a review of something that will not ship to actual consumers?
2) Should reviews of pre-production boards be passed off as reviews of shipping products (with different specifications?)
3) Will the difference between the RD400 and RD400X make any difference to the performance of the product reviewed, both in terms of raw mainboard performance and CrossFire performance? If so, how reliable is the Hexus review as a performance benchmark?
4) How many other Hexus reviews are conducted on non-final product and passed off as legitimate retail reviews? Is this appropriate?
5) ECS doesn't advertise with bit-tech - we told them that we wouldn't be reviewing a board from them until it was a final, retail product. Has advertising convinced the Hexus.String-pullers to gloss over the minor issues? (NB: Spurious Speculation.)
Disclaimer: I'm sure everyone knows that most of the guys at Hexus hate my guts on both a personal and professional level. I still read their site, though. This isn't a dig - it's a query as to what the community thinks is appropriate testing methodology and editorial practice. I could have picked on anyone, but I happened to have the inside track on this particular occasion. I'm curious for my own benefit.
And please - can we keep this on topic, without it turning into a slanging match. I just really want the answers to the questions, not views as to whether 'bit-tech sux0rz' or 'hexus is teh pwnz0r'.
Cheers chaps.
Wil, bit-tech.
Seeing as this place is ripe for discussion about 3D industry + website stuff, I thought I'd throw this one out there and see what people think. I'd go and post this as a question on the Hexus forums, but I'm actually IP-banned, for some bizarre reason.
Anyways, the question is concerning the new ECS CrossFire mainboard. Does it have VGA or no? And which version of the chipset is it using? And what version is being reviewed on Hexus?
ECS have announced that the final, shipping CrossFire board will use the RD400X chipset and WILL NOT have integrated graphics. Pre-production boards - one of which we currently have in the bit-tech labs to play with - DO have integrated graphics, with a VGA port on the back, and use the RD400 chipset (no X).
ECS sent me this, which I present just to back up the above paragraph:
I have just been informed by ECS that that mass production units of the PA1 Extreme will NOT have VGA port (the pre production sample you have has got embedded VGA with VGA port.)... The new version uses the RD400X, which doesn't have onboard VGA?
Now I know that ECS don't actually have finished production boards in Britain yet. So I was surprised to see the Hexus review of the board labelled as coming with the RD400X chipset, and without the VGA port listed in the spec. The review is written without any mention of a pre-production unit - all of these things rather indicating they had tested with a finished, retail board.
The pertinent Hexus review page is here: http://www.hexus.net/content/item.php?item=3683&page=3
However, if you look at page 2 of that article, the picture of the board (the only one in the whole review) clearly has a VGA port in the top left.
Further, ECS mailed me thus:
They [Hexus] had the pre-production sample – just as you did.
To me, this raises a number of issues.
1) Should reviews of pre-production boards be conducted at all? What use is a review of something that will not ship to actual consumers?
2) Should reviews of pre-production boards be passed off as reviews of shipping products (with different specifications?)
3) Will the difference between the RD400 and RD400X make any difference to the performance of the product reviewed, both in terms of raw mainboard performance and CrossFire performance? If so, how reliable is the Hexus review as a performance benchmark?
4) How many other Hexus reviews are conducted on non-final product and passed off as legitimate retail reviews? Is this appropriate?
5) ECS doesn't advertise with bit-tech - we told them that we wouldn't be reviewing a board from them until it was a final, retail product. Has advertising convinced the Hexus.String-pullers to gloss over the minor issues? (NB: Spurious Speculation.)
Disclaimer: I'm sure everyone knows that most of the guys at Hexus hate my guts on both a personal and professional level. I still read their site, though. This isn't a dig - it's a query as to what the community thinks is appropriate testing methodology and editorial practice. I could have picked on anyone, but I happened to have the inside track on this particular occasion. I'm curious for my own benefit.
And please - can we keep this on topic, without it turning into a slanging match. I just really want the answers to the questions, not views as to whether 'bit-tech sux0rz' or 'hexus is teh pwnz0r'.
Cheers chaps.
Wil, bit-tech.