PC-Engine said:Dual outputs on the RSX also support this last minute bolt-on PC G70 theory.
Shifty Geezer said:So the consesus is Sony missed the boat this time around? They were aiming for for something they couldn't manage, so went for a best compromise, taking nVidia's expertise at the cost of needing a different memory type, and going with XDR despite its cost for the low latency?
Ideally, they would have liked a unified 512 mb XDR?
phat said:PC-Engine said:Dual outputs on the RSX also support this last minute bolt-on PC G70 theory.
Umm... no.
phat said:The Cell + XDR and RSX + GDDR3 combo does seem a bit like a duct-tape job. But that doesn't mean it can't be as good as a full XDR solution. The bandwidth is nearly all there.
It's just that I think the PS3 is going to be more expensive for Sony to produce than they had planned. They're going to try to pass on that cost to us gamers somehow...
ShootMyMonkey said:XDR controllers are 32-bits wide each, and CELL has two of them. Each 512 Mbit DRAM is 16x (16-bits wide), so there's a total of four for 256 MB.
64 bits * 3.2 GT/s = 25.6 GB/s. Also, it does suggest that the DRAM clock for these chips is at 400 MHz. Perfectly normal for soldered-in DRAMs.
PC-Engine said:phat said:PC-Engine said:Dual outputs on the RSX also support this last minute bolt-on PC G70 theory.
Umm... no.
The Cell + XDR and RSX + GDDR3 combo does seem a bit like a duct-tape job.
phat said:PC-Engine said:phat said:PC-Engine said:Dual outputs on the RSX also support this last minute bolt-on PC G70 theory.
Umm... no.
The Cell + XDR and RSX + GDDR3 combo does seem a bit like a duct-tape job.
I wasn't disagreeing with you about the "last minute bolt-on" theory. I was disagreeing that the dual HDMI outputs have anything to do with it. They're perfectly consistent with Sony's aggressive connections/format coverage. It's clear that Sony is not just paying lip service to this living room hub concept, as it's certainly not cheap to include all those connectors and support all those memory card formats.
PiNkY said:The non-uniform memory system seems to imply that the switch to nivida happend quite late. This will probably have implications on their abilities to reduce manufacturing costs on further revisions
I don't see how you can make that conclusion, just for starters, you have no idea of the capabilities of the original GPU that would have gone into the system if Nvidia hadn't been involved.PC-Engine said:Dual outputs on the RSX also support this last minute bolt-on PC G70 theory.
Guden Oden said:I don't see how you can make that conclusion, just for starters, you have no idea of the capabilities of the original GPU that would have gone into the system if Nvidia hadn't been involved.PC-Engine said:Dual outputs on the RSX also support this last minute bolt-on PC G70 theory.
You're just crapping on sony at every chance you get, as per usual...
Shifty Geezer said:True, but how do you explain it was a last-tminute bolt-on when it happened like years before the PS3 is to be released? Sony tried 3 different approaches it seems, and the best approach it seems was to go with a leader in the field with lots of experience and a back catalogue of support tools that the other solutions couldn't offer.
PC-Engine said:Shifty Geezer said:True, but how do you explain it was a last-tminute bolt-on when it happened like years before the PS3 is to be released? Sony tried 3 different approaches it seems, and the best approach it seems was to go with a leader in the field with lots of experience and a back catalogue of support tools that the other solutions couldn't offer.
Press releases isn't proof it happened years ago.
RSX is basically a PC chip bolted on at the last minute.
Jaws said:PC-Engine said:Shifty Geezer said:True, but how do you explain it was a last-tminute bolt-on when it happened like years before the PS3 is to be released? Sony tried 3 different approaches it seems, and the best approach it seems was to go with a leader in the field with lots of experience and a back catalogue of support tools that the other solutions couldn't offer.
Press releases isn't proof it happened years ago.
RSX is basically a PC chip bolted on at the last minute.
Yep, and the R500 is a PC chip bolted onto the X360...point?
PC-Engine said:Jaws said:PC-Engine said:Shifty Geezer said:True, but how do you explain it was a last-tminute bolt-on when it happened like years before the PS3 is to be released? Sony tried 3 different approaches it seems, and the best approach it seems was to go with a leader in the field with lots of experience and a back catalogue of support tools that the other solutions couldn't offer.
Press releases isn't proof it happened years ago.
RSX is basically a PC chip bolted on at the last minute.
Yep, and the R500 is a PC chip bolted onto the X360...point?
Xenos is not a PC chip. It has a EDRAM block.