Pixel Pop said:
Hi,
Eoin Leyden doesn't know how the performance of the .13 R300 will "come out", but makes a guess, using a 500Mhz R300 as an example, that will come close, if not better the NV30.
Perhaps he is talking about a part that outperforms the current Radeon 9700 Pro by around a third, from his experience.
It's always a mistake to judge competing architectures by MHz, whether it's cpu, vpus, or gpus. The statement says to me that he knows little to nothing about either product--else he would not make it on the mere basis of MHz. We should remember that we have yet to see even a public demo sample of nv30 running at 500MHz, so there is much uncertainty remaining in the picture. I think nVidia will hit its MHz target--however it is unknown what architectural sacrifices they may have to make to do so. With ATI the picture is crystal clear. All that remains in question is what improvements over the existing R300 ATI will be able to add to the .13 micron R400.
nVIDIA by really pushing "Cinematic" graphics with the Dawn and Ogre demos, are making the GeForce FX brand as recognisable and consumable as they can, scoring a fillip in the industry.
(ATi gave us a nice car demo with purportedly I8NV30 number plates
)
Actually, I have Five (5) very nice DX9 demos from ATI that were released a few days ago with the DX9 Catalysts. I also have three (3) very cool screen savers that are sort of DX9 "mini-demos" in themselves. The car paint demo is just one of them. I was not impressed with the dancing Ogre or the rusting truck or the space ship "field of focus" demo (that one *really* smacked of 3dfx and the V5)--Dawn I would class as "OK"--but I still have yet to see them a little more clearly, so it's really hard to tell. Right now I would definitely give the nod to ATI on the demo front.
The word "Cinematic" was used by 3dfx heavily back in '99 and on to the end. It's almost become a cliche' as a result. Overall, less than original and therefore less than impressive. ATI's approach, however, strikes me as far less stale and much more original.
From what I've seen of ATi, there's a little bit of silicon envy, but probably because nVIDIA P.R and silicon are just a notch above theirs.
But I could be completely off the mark.
*chuckle* Now, in comparing a DX9/Ogl 2.0 product that is *so far* vaporware to one that has been shipping for months and has been purchased by literally millions of people (yes, I can provide a link, I just don't feel like looking it up right now), it doesn't strike me as if ATI would be the logical candidate to be suffering "silicon envy" right about now. And I genuinely feel sorry for nVidia's PR--they are in exactly the same position nVidia put 3dfx in back in the latter '90's--that of having to say "But we don't need that feature, and we'll use it when *we* think there's a need"--referring here to nVidia's comments on ATI's 256-bit bus contrasted with nVidia's lack of it--to which there really is no good reply. That's never any fun for PR people. (I would imagine Brian Burke, if he is still with nVidia, is having some truly awful deja vu right about now....
)
OTOH, I am personally very impressed with the way ATI's staff and people have comported themselves since the launch of the 9700 Pro. All in all it has been a masterful job and has really created an impression that nVidia is "sitting still" (much like nVidia created around 3dfx way back when.)
What I'm curious about is how soon the mainstream NV30 derivatives come along after the NV30 release (with performance along side the 9700 Pro, but features beyond), and how cheap current ATi DX9 products become.
Features or price anyone?
Cheers.
Well, nVidia will be some months behind ATI in everything--including bargain-priced DX9 products--and so we won't have an apple-apple comparison probably in until around March '03, when I estimate nVidia might be shipping some other, lower-priced DX9 products comparable to what ATI is doing now with 9500 (or maybe 9100) and up products.
This whole thing is so ironic--I can still recall reading an interview back in the 3dfx days when a nVidia employee said when questioned about how he "felt" about 3dfx (or some similar moronic question): "It's really tough for a company to miss an entire product cycle. Really tough."
Yep, it is....nVidia. Ah, who can fail to sniff the sweet bouquet of this delicious irony?....
Edit: typos