Nvidia launches GTX 200 series GPUs
James O'Brien
GeForce10 series already?? #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:09 GMT

FFS they just came out with the 9 series. Why bother anymore to have a high end rig when every 3 months its time for another upgrade because your not at the top anymore. I love nVidia but damn, this is just overkill.
Michael
236W on a graphics card? #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:09 GMT

Green computing campaigners are going to LOVE that.
Joerg
What a bad design. 180-260Watts? That's insane! #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:09 GMT
And it's a real waste of money to buy the first GPUs of a new family of products anyway. In a 4-6 months time Nvidia will surely start selling way cheaper GPUs based on the new architecture that will consume 40-80Watts of power.
The first generation product are only a waste of money for rich people that don't have anything better to do than waste money playing games.
Anonymous Coward
Power crazy! #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:21 GMT

How long before we start seeing PC cases with duel power supplies just to feel Nvidias ever increasing hunger for wattage?
Thomas
The bleeding edge of GFX development.... #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:21 GMT
Ash
No problem #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:24 GMT
Just means that 3 days later i'll get a second 8800GTX, stick it in SLI with my other, and i'll have a card 50% (by their maths) faster than one of these brand new cards.
I can play Age of Conan at max settings, 1980x1400, at 30fps right now. SLI should keep me going for at least another year.
Hell, by that time, i'll get a console and an Eee PC instead.
Chris
whereas the second generation product #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:35 GMT
are for who? Slightly less rich people who still don't have anything better to do than waste money playing games? The entire discrete graphics card industry depends on those who don't have anything better to do than etc...
Ian Emery
Can you take the heat?? #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:51 GMT

Well, at least you will not need to turn the central heating on again; although you had better upgrade the air conditioning.
I can feel the heat radiating from my HD3870; fcuk knows what these cards will feel like.
Mines the asbestos lined one with the foundry gloves in the pocket.
Anonymous Coward
@Power Crazy #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:54 GMT

They've been selling 'em for the last few months:-
http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=CA-072-AN
Anonymous Coward
Wasted #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:54 GMT

All those gazillions of megamonkeys of processing power, and Windows still looks like My First Operating System, ugly and cobbled together.
Anonymous Coward
Obligatory monday moan #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:54 GMT

Hi-spec PC gaming has been killed off by the Crysis fiasco, rampant piracy, and shiny new consoles that are cheaper than the cards themselves.
I just upgraded last year, and feel like i've wasted my money already, my box is now a noiser room-heater that has hugely increased my electricity bills.
Even though Crysis is playable (20fps), i just can't be arsed anymore, Spore and Starcraft 2 are the only games worth having for a long while anyway.
The PS3 will keep me going for the next few years, maybe i'll be back then.
Anonymous Coward
Obligatory Vista Joke #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 13:54 GMT

And the Vista overall performnance score moved to 5.9 from 5.7 and it still takes forever for AERO to switch desktops!
Matt W
In other news #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 14:07 GMT

You can get an 8800GT for ~GBP100 now. Good value from where I'm sitting. (Railgun ahoy !)
Adrian
But will it #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 14:07 GMT

render the Solitaire cards any better ?
I hear Paris likes it hot...
matt
RE: GeForce10 series already?? #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 14:50 GMT
The 9 series wasnt really a new series. Just a con/stop gap.
They just shrank the G80 chip in the original 8 series cards (GTX, Ultra, GTS 320/640mb) called it the G92. Used the G92 in the 8800GT and GTS 512mb.
Then they rebranded the G92 as the 9 series.
This really is a new generation of card though
Stone Fox
@Joerg #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 14:50 GMT

"Don't have anything better to do than play games...."
Ummm.... That's like saying "some people don't have anything better to do than surf" or "some people don't have anything better to do than go to the gym"
So everyone should conform to your hobbies? Anyone else is wasting their time? I work hard and I spend quite a bit of money on my toys.
I'll be looking at one of these cards, or alternatively go the same way as Ash and buy a second 8800GTX, given that the GeForce280 will costs nearly as much as my surfboard.
Oh, and as for 40-80watts? Do you know anything about graphics cards? They frequently struggle to get mid range cards draw that little. Go check what an 8800GTX draws you muppet.
@ James O'Brien
I suspect it's because the 9's have been an utter failure. They're still using the G92 core and last time I looked they couldn't get either the 9800GTX or 9800GX2 to out-benchmark the 8800GTX!
Although that's supposed to be driver related it's still piss poor.
TrixyB
Available now... #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 14:50 GMT

Already available on ebuyer today for an eyewaterung price!!
http://www.ebuyer.com/cat/Graphics-Cards-Nvidia/subcat/nVIDIA-260---280-range
Ho hum, glad I stopped at 9800GTX
mark
power management in vista #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 14:54 GMT
I'm guessing aero counts as graphics intensive? so when can the card power down? during POST?
I held off buying a new system since I new these cards were coming out, now I might wait a bit longer, at least till I see some benchmarks. The price/performance/power station requirements seem to be a little off the sweet spot for me atm.
Morten Bjoernsvik
Fanless non-gamer #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 14:54 GMT

I do not buy them before they become fanless and cost less than £50. Fans on GFX-cards do tend to be notoriously noisy. Without a fan, they need to come down to around 35w, but this is mainly because the memory is clocked lower so it becomes remarkably slower.
I only run linux so the most gfx-demanding I use is probably Google-Earth, So even my fanless GF7300 does the job.
Anonymous Coward
Price? #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 14:54 GMT
£563.99 for the top-o-the-range one, according to Overclockers.
You can buy an entire PC (or 2 and a half Aspire Ones) for less than that.
JonB
@Power #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 14:54 GMT
The ATI X1950's from a while back needed 30A @ 12V or 360 Watts peak.
Or so it said on the box, and indeed my cheapo 500W supply had to be replaced to get a stable system.
It really does heat the room up, and it's not even high end any more.
Christopher Reeve's Horse
Nice Pins... #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 14:54 GMT

What really grabs my goat is this new 6pin+8pin power requirement - so you're supposed to blow hundreds of pounds on a top end graphics card, and also the £150+ for the PSU that happens to have the correct connections...
What about all the people that already have a very good power supply that has a standard 6+6pin SLI output? There's definitely market collusion going on here to force people into unnecessary upgrades!
Why I ought to.....
lIsRT
Why... #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 15:08 GMT

...is the bottom of a graphics card always shinier / better finished than the top?
Or, why is it flashy at all? - shiny reflectivity is only going to be appreciated by those with a case window, but even they would be disappointed if the fancy part is to the bottom, hidden, and the PCB/donotremove-stickers are obviously spoiling the aesthetics to the top.
Using the upside-down shots for promo pics is almost as bad as the ads for hard disks showing the platters...
Charles Tsang
Crysis? Smysis? #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 15:35 GMT

For all you non-gamers out there, the "Crysis" gamers frequently refer to is a particularly hardware thrashing game that actually delivers on all the Wattage being consumed.
For the complete lowdown, go here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crysis
But for a brief flavour of how hard it thrashes your hardware, most hardware reviewers post frames per second in the high 90s for most games of today (from Half Life 2 onwards) with a reasonable graphics output of 1600x1200 with all the graphical bells and whistles turned on.
Crysis barely managers 30fps and that's also with the output toned down to 1280x1024. Rack the display output up to the 1600x1200 and we start seeing <10 fps.
BTW 30 frames per second is seen as the bare minimum for a First Person Shooter.
So it'll be interesting to see how this new card and also ATI's one fare against the "Crysis" experience.
Anonymous Coward
Alternative options ? #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 15:35 GMT
"You can get an 8800GT for ~GBP100 now."
So what's better, 2x 8800GT or one new 260 ?
Gordon Ross
@No Problem, Ash #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 15:35 GMT

"Just means that 3 days later i'll get a second 8800GTX, stick it in SLI with my other, and i'll have a card 50% (by their maths) faster than one of these brand new cards."
The current Custom PC mag has a review of graphics cards, and basically says that SLI/CrossFire hardly works. In some cases, two cards can be worse than one.
Paris - 'cause I'd be settle for one of her...
ryan
I've seen the future. it's mediocre. #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 16:05 GMT

Bleeding edge aside, technology is becoming cheap enough to treat a desktop PC as a short-term purchase, rather than a multi-thousand pound investment.
Rather than paying through the nose and building myself a cutting edge gaming system every couple of years, i've started spending £300 on a low spec pre-built PC, filling it with RAM and bunging a half decent graphics card in.
Sure, it'll be obsolete within a year, but it was cheap enough to just throw away and buy another one to tide me over for a year. And these disposable desktops even come with a warranty should the unthinkable happen!
Dick Emery
Crippled cards too #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 17:16 GMT

Don't forget they removed Video Mirroring because of DRM on all 8xxx series cards and above. Thanks Nvidia. You really know how to fuck over your customers.
Steven Knox
@IIsRT #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 17:16 GMT

Actually, the TOP of the card is the shiny/fancy bit. PCI was designed to make you insert the card UPSIDE-DOWN in an attempt to stop punters from putting the cards in the old ISA slots. AGP and PCI-X just followed suit for no real reason.
andy rock
@Ryan #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 19:21 GMT

shame on you. that's eco-terrorism!
DeFex
nothing better to do. #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 19:25 GMT

Funny how manufacterers of CPU, power supply, hard drive, RAM etc all manage to decrease the power requirements while increasing performance. but the "green team". not so much.
easyk
@ Nice Pins... By Christopher Reeve's Horse #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 22:22 GMT

"What about all the people that already have a very good power supply that has a standard 6+6pin SLI output? There's definitely market collusion going on here to force people into unnecessary upgrades!"
The power pinout of the cards is dictated by the fact that the conector pins have a specific "amps per conductor". The engineers hands were probably tied. You can violate the spec yourself by plugging into an interface connector. Better though is to cut off the wires at the supply and run your own appropriate gauge conductors to the required connector. Just dont wire 12 volts to a ground pin as smoke and fire quickly follow.
daniel hobson
this is what annoys me about all graphics cards reviews/introductions/etc #
Posted Monday 16th June 2008 22:22 GMT

none of you reporters never give the truly important requirements and that is the AMPAGE!!!!!!! you all go on about the wattage fair enough that is important but with PSU's reaching 1000+watts anyone who buys a highend gfx card and a shitty bottom end bollocks psu only has themselves to blame, its also not reporters who are just to blame. manufacturers of PSU's are just as shit buy not displaying the ampage rating of their psu's on websites and also the retailers that do the same. y'all shit!!! only sites i can find when buying new psu's that display the ampage on the 12v rail of a psu are all foreign!!!! we english get ripped off enough without having to pay import tax!!!!
y'all sicken me *shakes penis in your face*
excuse me whilst i cry golden tears in your eyes!
frankgobbo
@Daniel Hobson #
Posted Tuesday 17th June 2008 02:58 GMT

Umm, unless your PSU is made in England, you're paying import tax on it already.
Adrian Esdaile
Nice hardware, could we have some drivers please? #
Posted Tuesday 17th June 2008 09:43 GMT

Great, more Nvidia hardware.
Perhaps they could spend a couple of dollars more on the stabilty of their drivers? The latest 175 series drivers are woeful, leading to all manner of amusing BSODs. Even the latest Nvidia Linux drivers (well, the 64bit ones) won't recognise my nearly-new 8800GTS!
Robert Heffernan
@Daniel Hobson #
Posted Tuesday 17th June 2008 09:43 GMT

If you know the wattage of the card then some basic maths will give you the amps..
Watts = Volts x Amps
so
Amps = Watts / Volts
19.66A = 236W / 12V
Mines the one with the pocket protector and slide rule.
ryan
@frank gobbo #
Posted Tuesday 17th June 2008 09:43 GMT

which is why whenever i buy from abroad, i make sure i enter my full first name.
"Gift for" being a very popular first name round my neck of the woods.
TeeCee
@daniel hobson #
Posted Tuesday 17th June 2008 09:43 GMT

Funny that. All the decent products I've ever looked at seem to have a spec sheet on the manufacturer's website showing total amps available and the max draw on each rail. That even goes down as far as the not-a-well-known-brand unit currently doing its stuff in my rig.
For the cheap ones, who gives a toss? If you buy an el cheapo PSU you should be damned grateful if the volts are anywhere near spec, never mind the current. Anyone not quoting a full spec probably has a damned good reason for keeping quiet on the subject.
Charles Tsang
Big screens benefit the most #
Posted Tuesday 17th June 2008 12:13 GMT

Hmmm, from some Inquiring sites, the early numbers seem to suggest that it's the big screens that get the biggest benefit. So if you are still on your 19" monitor with a maximum resolution of 1280x1024, the upgrade would hardly be worth it.
Then again, the people that can afford the 30" screens that benefit the most are the ones most likely to be able to afford one of these cards anyway!
I wonder if ATI will be doing the same as they did at the last launch and concentrating on volume as opposed to Top Dog. The card that is the Top Dog typically costs Top Dollar, and as I said, it's the people that have the big house that has the large room for large monitors that buys the Top Dog card. So in terms of earnings, I think the lesser cards are what makes the company coffers less empty.
However, the cynic in me still thinks that if ATI could have shot for Top Dog they would have....
PS: I'm a PC gaming fan with a 24" monitor with a self specced Crysis killer machine (heh, my machine lost to the beast that is Crysis!) but the whole Console and HD thang is most definitely going to be my next purchasing focus.