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Graphic cards
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Graphic cards
The Radeon 5000 series of graphics cards were rather recently released by AMD/ATI and for the very first time in a couple of years, AMD/ATI (hereafter referred to as only AMD) is back in the performance lead. NVIDIA will release their next generation of graphics cards rather soon but no date is set and very little information about it has leaked to the press.
Graphic cards
Vapor-X Karten aus dem Hause Sapphire sind Verkaufsschlager und finden immer mehr Anhänger, verbinden sie in der Regel ein wenig mehr Leistung mit einer in Punkto Leistung aber auch Lautstärke optimierten Kühlung zu einem fairen Preis. Nachdem wir bereits die Sapphire Radeon HD 5870 Vapor-X testen durften, folgt nun ein weiterer Vertreter der HD 5000 Serie in Form der Sapphire HD 5770 Vapor-X, die das bekannte Konzept fortsetzt. Die Erwartungen sind hoch und ob die leichte Übertaktung des RV840 Chip im direkten Vergleich zur HD 5770 Referenzkarte einen Nutzen bringt werden wir wie immer in unserem Test zeigen.
Graphic cards
Today we are looking at the ATI Radeon HD5670 512MB graphics card. This particular card utilizes the latest technology from AMD, as well as sporting the newest DirectX11 platform whilst using little power and being the cheapest card in AMD’s DX11 range.
Graphic cards
Just when I thought they had finished cutting halves, ATI has taken the 40nm Cypress architecture to a new low. Low power, that is. In a brand new design, unlike anything they have released with this architecture, ATI is going after the Home Theater PC market with their heat sinks blazing. OK, I exaggerate; the Radeon HD5450 video card actually runs pretty cool, which is the point, really. It's silent, too, with a large and lovely red heatsink sitting atop the tiny GPU, sans fan. Follow along with Benchmark Reviews as we investigate an early sample of ATI's new standard bearer for low-power HTPC applications.
Graphic cards
I really was impressed with the performance and value of HIS's HD 5670 IceQ 512MB video card. HIS always has had a different approach on video cards that makes them both more attractive and good cooling with their IceQ line and the HD 5670 IceQ is no exception. With native HDMI and DVI it makes a compelling card for a HTPC or desktop alike.
Graphic cards
Most of the discussion surrounding the Radeon HD5830 video card has been about its performance relative to its two nearest neighbors in the ATI lineup. People are falling over backwards trying to get a fix on its which side of the fence the 5830 belongs: closer to the HD5770, or nearer to the HD5850. In Benchmark Reviews' recent evaluation of the HD5830, we compared it to a wide variety of video cards, including several that are not compatible with Microsoft's DirectX-11. Our DirectX-10 testing provided a level playing field for all the video cards, so we could make a fair comparison with older graphics cards that readers may currently be using, and the current models from NVIDIA that are limited to DX10. Still, gamers are itching to see how the new crop of cards would fare with DX11 enabled. So then, let's find out, shall we?
Graphic cards
So today one of the most discussed graphics card launches of all time takes place; join us as we take a look at the real world performance of the GTX 480 covering DirectX 9, 10, 10.1 and 11 gaming, GPU Computing (CUDA), High Definition playback, PhysX, 3DVision, gaming with 32x anti-aliasing and even 3D-DVD playback. If that’s not enough then how about internal and external temperature readings, power use then some overclocking?
Graphic cards
The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 470 might not be the coolest running graphics accelerator around, but that doesn't stop overclockers from attempting voltage modifications on it. Guide inside.
Graphic cards
When the NDA was lifted on the Eyefinity6 version of the HD 5870 we had a good look of it here. The problem we ran into, though, was the lack of any active adapter. What this meant was we weren't able to test the model as we normally would. Instead we had a look at it at 5760 x 1200 to see just how it performed.
Graphic cards
Today for review I've got a video card from Sparkle Computer Corp, it's an Nvidia based GT240 that has 512MB of ram built-in. With those specs I'm sure you can guess it's not really a card you'd want for gaming, but it has it's place nonetheless. It does feature a native HDMI port, along with both VGA and DVI ports on it, so no adapter needed for HDMI which is nice. The card is also rather inexpensive and virtually silent, it would make a good choice for an HTPC I'm sure. So read on...
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