Gary Whitta
Member
Memtest just threw a ton of errors in my face, maybe it's bad RAM after all!
I never had a problem with an ATI card nor their drivers. Isn't the whole "ATI has shit drivers" just an old meme by now?brain_stew said:Shhh, you're not allowed to say Nvidia have better drivers than ATI around here.
Even though they most certainly do.
brain_stew said:The problem with relying on an Atom/Ion combo is that if you don't have a media player and codec that supports DXVA then its not going to play if its a HD file. As such I'd probably be tempted to get, a cheapo socket 775 m-itx motherboard like this:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813500044&cm_re=itx-_-13-500-044-_-Product
Then pair that with a cheapy low end socket 775 dual core processor like this:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819116264
This cheapy 2GB stick of RAM:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...0227494&cm_re=2gb_ddr2-_-20-227-494-_-Product
Then you're most of the way there. There's plenty of M-ITX cases to choose from and this sort of setup will require the absolute minimum PSU capacity.
Edit: Just realised that board doesn't have an HDMI output, that's no good, I'll find something more suitable.
Its hard to find any decent alternatives in that price range, step up a little and you could get this combo, would be much better suited:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131659
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103687
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...0231252&cm_re=2gb_ddr3-_-20-231-252-_-Product
Pricier but it does give you HDMI with HD audio, decent integrated graphics, wireless N, a more stable motherboard/chipset and the option to add a dedicated GPU or upgrade the processor cheaply later along the line if you want more out of it.
brain_stew said:Given your options, you'd be crazy to go with the 5850. I'd even choose the GTX 460 if they were evenly priced tbh, Nvidia cards just offer a lot of extras that make them worth a lot more for me.
brain_stew said:Perfect time to switch it for a GTX 470 and get ~$100 of your cash back and a better GPU to boot.![]()
Ogs said:Its also 1 of many reasons im going back to Nvidia, last bunch of ATI drivers have done more harm than good in many of my gamesGreat hardware, but there drivers just aint upto par with Nvidia in quick enough time (from my experience, of course).
Because you don't have any problems with your card? Good for you, but come on...DennisK4 said:I never had a problem with an ATI card nor their drivers. Isn't the whole "ATI has shit drivers" just an old meme by now?
DennisK4 said:I never had a problem with an ATI card nor their drivers. Isn't the whole "ATI has shit drivers" just an old meme by now?
DennisK4 said:Yup, thats an nVIDIA fanboy![]()
Omiee said:Can anbody help me with this
what should i get
460 in SLI with i5 760
or 5870 crossfire with i5 760
which is faster and can i get some benchmarks..?
its either this setup
http://tweakers.net/gallery/367893?wish_id=85877#tab:wenslijst
or this one
http://tweakers.net/gallery/367893?wish_id=85873#tab:wenslijst
DennisK4 said:Yup, thats an nVIDIA fanboy![]()
Gary Whitta said:Memtest just threw a ton of errors in my face, maybe it's bad RAM after all!
THE:MILKMAN said:Hope you don't mind me pointing out that the asus motherboard linked above seems to take so-dimm memory?
So would require this: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231214
DennisK4 said:I never had a problem with an ATI card nor their drivers. Isn't the whole "ATI has shit drivers" just an old meme by now?
Gary Whitta said:Yeah I don't think it's the CPU. There's something weird going on that's for sure, WoW is crashing all the time now.
ATI cards don't support hardware accelerated h264 playback when it doesn't follow blu-ray standard (anime, series or movies enconded with x264 if you're not careful with the encoding etc) thanks to its drivers.DennisK4 said:I never had a problem with an ATI card nor their drivers. Isn't the whole "ATI has shit drivers" just an old meme by now?
brain_stew said:I'd go for a single GTX 480 personally, don't deal with potential multi GPU hassles (dodgy performance scaling at times, especially on the ATI side, increased input lag, micro stuttering, unreasonable power draws etc.) and a small framebuffer when you don't have to.
Standard GTX 480s are available for $450 these days or you can get the Zotac AMP edition for $510 and that gets rid of the noise and heat "issues" that come with buying a standard GTX 480 and it also has a big factory overclock making it the best card on the market atm, assuming you have the cash and PSU for it.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814500166&cm_re=gtx_480-_-14-500-166-_-Product
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130552&cm_re=gtx_480-_-14-130-552-_-Product
Nvidia just have the best cards at the moment, no point in fighting it.![]()
I've recommended 100s of ATI cards on here (more than Nvidia cards actually) but atm, Nvidia just have the best offerings at most of the major pricepoints. The better drivers/featureset are just an extra (very tasty) bonus.
Knew it.
Omiee said:I dont wanna 480 first of all to much power consuming and noise and i heard its less porwerfull than the 5870
Any benchmarks to see which is faster a 5870 crossfire and the 460 SLI
Mr_Brit said:Have to agree with brain_stew, nvidia have all the price segments of the 'proper' gaming cards under wraps, under no circumstances should anyone consider an ATI card at this moment.
Both wrong. A 480 is a lot faster and runs at a similar noise level, it's even quieter if you go for a custom cooler.Omiee said:I dont wanna 480 first of all to much power consuming and noise and i heard its less porwerfull than the 5870
Any benchmarks to see which is faster a 5870 crossfire and the 460 SLI
Yeah, pretty much. ATI prices in the UK are a joke, cheapest 5850s are around £40 more than a 1GB Gigabyte GTX 460. Even the 470 has come down to around the 5850s price whilst offering much better performance and features.brain_stew said:Well ATI are still selling their cards above RRP despite them being nearly a year old, while Nvidia's card have seen some huge price slashes after just a few short months in the marketplace. Its hardly surprising, especially considering introducing a brand new architecture meant that Nvidia's early drivers were far from optimal in terms of performance.
Big performance increase from driver updates + huge price cut = Much more appealing cards.
ATI were ruling the roost for a long ass time but the pendulum finally seems to be swinging the other way atm. ATI's cards need a price cut and badly.
Omiee said:I dont wanna 480 first of all to much power consuming and noise and i heard its less porwerfull than the 5870
Any benchmarks to see which is faster a 5870 crossfire and the 460 SLI
brain_stew said:It'll consume less power than a 460 SLI or 5870 crossfire setup so I don't see why that's an issue and the AMP edition is quieter than any GTX 460 or 5870 you can buy.
I don't know whoever told you a 5870 was faster than a GTX 480 but they're smoking some crazy shit. They're not even in the same performance category. The GTX 480 completely blows it away these days (especially that AMP edition card).
If you insist on going with a dual GPU setup (though I strongly recommend against it) then get the GTX 460s. Performance is pretty similar but pricing isn't and ATI's crossfire drivers just aren't upto snuff to SLI.
brain_stew said:It'll consume less power than a 460 SLI or 5870 crossfire setup so I don't see why that's an issue and the AMP edition is quieter than any GTX 460 or 5870 you can buy especially if you want to run two of the things!! If noise is a serious issue than that's a major reason to go with the 480 AMP.
See:
I don't know whoever told you a 5870 was faster than a GTX 480 but they're smoking some crazy shit. They're not even in the same performance category. The GTX 480 completely blows it away these days (especially that AMP edition card).
If you insist on going with a dual GPU setup (though I strongly recommend against it) then get the GTX 460s. Performance is pretty similar but pricing isn't and ATI's crossfire drivers just aren't upto snuff to SLI.
Boonoo said:I just got in my 460, and I was wondering if there are are any programs of utilities that work well with nvidia cards? I've been ATI until now.
I'm using MSI afterburner for overclocking; is there anything better?
Dual GPU setups are more trouble than they're worth, it's always better to just put up some money and go single card.kinggroin said:Pshhh, scaredy cat
Once you've conquered xFire, SLI is a walk in the park:lol
Yup, thats an nVIDIA fanboy![]()
kinggroin said:Pshhh, scaredy cat
Once you've conquered xFire, SLI is a walk in the park:lol
Mr_Brit said:Dual GPU setups are more trouble than they're worth, it's always better to just put up some money and go single card.
brain_stew said:See, that's the thing, you shouldn't have to "conquer" anything, that shit should just work. Many of the people jumping into a multi GPU setup don't release the many drawbaks you willl be facing and that it does make life more of a hassle than it needs to be. For those that are dedicated and can't notice stuff like micro-stutter and increased input lag, then go ahead but while a multi GPU setup isn't as straightforward as running a single GPU setup (and honestly, I think it never will be) then I can't consciously recommend it without a whole host of qualifiers.
It just isn't for everyone and when there's blazing fast single GPU solutions available for reasonable prices that come with a crapload of VRAM, well, forgive me for picking the single card solution as the one I choose to push. Its still a better fit for the majority of gamers in my book and I don't see anything changing that in the forseeable future. Go SLI if a single GTX 480 doesn't offer enough performance for you (only really applicable to gamers that use S3D or 2560x1600 resolutions) otherwise, its probably not worth the bother.
Mind 2x GTX 470s are starting to look an intriguing option. They can be had for as little as ~$550 and at least come with a reasonable amount of VRAM (though not as much as I'd like) and even when performance scaling isn't upto snuff a single GTX 470 is still a beast.
kinggroin said:Of course no should HAVE to conquer anything. It's why I'd never recommend ATI hardware when goign dual GPU. I also NEVER said it's for everyone either (look above). However, SLI and even xfire does serve a purpose for many PC gaming enthusiasts.
DennisK4 said:A couble of thoughts:
1) No doubt the 460 is a great card for the money as long as people stay away from the 786 MB version.
2) While your hatred of dual-GPU setups is well known, and certainly a single GPU is always better than a dual-GPU setup of comparable power, there is no getting around the obvious reason why its worth having more than one GPU: Power. If at all possible, I would recommend a dual or triple GPU setup for people who intend to game at resolutions above 1920x1200.
3) I am guessing that most people who game at very high resolutions are also mostly graphics whores, and let me tell you, the 1 GB VRAM standard is getting old. I would recommend getting the 2GB 460, 1.5 GB 480, 2GB 5870 or 4 GB 5970 for people intending to run heavily modded games at very resolutions with lots of AA.
Personal note: my 4870x2 is no longer giving me power enough for 2560x1600, and I am hurting from the 1 GB per GPU limitation.
brain_stew said:Actually, I think we're mostly on the same page here.
1) Goes without saying.
2) This is precisely where I recommend dual GPU setups. Its why I ask for the gaming resolution and whether or not 3D is involved when someone queries it. There's very little a multi GPU setup can offer a 1080p gamer unless they're a supersampling whore but if you game at 2560x1600 or use stereo 3D then an SLI 470 or SLI 480 setup definitely begins to make sense. This is also why I reserve multi GPU setups for those where a single GTX 480 won't satisfy. Go multi GPU if you need more than a GTX 480 can offer, not if a single GTX 480 will satisfy you. You can always add a second later on.
3) This is another reason why I'm going cold on these dual midrange SLI setups. 1GB VRAM. Most are choosing 2x1GB GTX 460s and sorry to say it but that 1GB framebuffer is going to prove a major bottleneck in the future if it isn't one already. Its why I see the 1.5GB GTX 480 as a better option than SLI 460s and why I'd push the true enthusiast to SLI 480s, 'cos you're going to need that VRAM. 2GB 460s haven't hit the states yet but they may make things at least a little interesting. Until they do I see SLI 460s as a bad option.
Smo21 said:hey brain_stew, just wondering if you got my pm.
Salaadin said:Is there a market for used graphics cards? I see people try to sell them here and there but wonder if they ever actually do sell?
Wow, is that chart accurate? 470's are actually slightly quieter than 460's?brain_stew said:It'll consume less power than a 460 SLI or 5870 crossfire setup so I don't see why that's an issue and the AMP edition is quieter than any GTX 460 or 5870 you can buy especially if you want to run two of the things!! If noise is a serious issue than that's a major reason to go with the 480 AMP.
See:
![]()
SLI GTX 460s a whole 12Db louder than the GTX 480 AMP, point proven, I think.
I don't know whoever told you a 5870 was faster than a GTX 480 but they're smoking some crazy shit. They're not even in the same performance category. The GTX 480 completely blows it away these days (especially that AMP edition card).
If you insist on going with a dual GPU setup (though I strongly recommend against it) then get the GTX 460s. Performance is pretty similar but pricing isn't and ATI's crossfire drivers just aren't upto snuff to SLI.
kinggroin said:ebay?
Yes.Mr Nightman said:Am condsidering doing a video card/ motherboard upgrade this holiday season, just had a question. I'm leaning towards a GTX 460 card, and currently have a 9800GT that I plan to use as a physx card, would my 600 Watt PSU be able to handle both?
You'll need to use an even number of sticks to get dual channel. Buy 2 more 1GB sticks.Aesius said:I have 2 1GB sticks of PC6400 DDR2 memory running in dual channel.
What's the best way to upgrade? I need at least 4 GB, and my motherboard has 4 slots. Can I pop in a 2GB stick and be ok, or would I be better off buying 2 more 1gb sticks?
Mr_Brit said:Yes.
Aesius said:I have 2 1GB sticks of PC6400 DDR2 memory running in dual channel.
What's the best way to upgrade? I need at least 4 GB, and my motherboard has 4 slots. Can I pop in a 2GB stick and be ok, or would I be better off buying 2 more 1gb sticks?
brain_stew said:You could get a 2x2GB kit and have 6GB. Don't get a single 2GB stick.
brain_stew said:Why are you replacing the Q6600?
Just OC it and no game will give you an issue. A ~3.4ghz Q6600 is equal to a stock i5-750 and people buying them chips are hardly clamouring for extra performance.
You just seem to be spending money for the sake of it tbh. If your PSU runs your current rig just fine then why upgrade? Its clearly a solid enough unit.
When you can get the best GTX 460 1GB on the market for $280, paying $360 for a 5850 just seems crazy to me:
http://www.pccasegear.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=193_687&products_id=14938
The Caviar Green drives are slow as hell, get a Samsung F3 instead.
NinjaTehFish said:First up, thanks for your time.
Ok.....but i still want a decent setup for my bro too.
So, say i keep the Q6600 and get a cheaper phenom x4 for my bro....Is the gtx460 That much of an improvement over the 4870?
I figured i can cross fire later if need to and i know i'll be paying well under rrp.
Avyrocky said:I would like to purchase another monitor and have a dual monitor setup. I have a samsung syncmaster 2243 and would like to add a 24 inch samsung monitor. My graphics card is an ATI 5870 Sapphire.
I would like to work while having a dvd on or even game and have one monitor with porn on.
How would the sound work for 2 monitors both playing different stuff on?
Regards
Rocky
Omiee said:ok so guys im going for the 480 card
but is it better to keep my 1055X6 ( well my order for it )
or cancell the order and get a i5 760 and how much is the difference between that for gaming and a i7 860.
keep in mind only for gaming i dont plan to use it for heavy programms or what ever.
should i just settle with the 1055 or get the i5 or spend more and get the i7
also will my cooler master 750W be enough for the 480 and if i plan to do a SLI later or does it consume to much power the 480SLI.
also the difference in price between the i7 860 and i7 930 is nothing so which one is better.