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Graphic cards
Le mois de juin risque d’être une période charnière dans le petit monde des GPUs, AMD devrait introniser une nouvelle norme de mémoire, HBM, que certains décrivent comme révolutionnaire, et tout le monde imaginait que Nvidia préparait une réponse à cette attaque de son meilleur ennemi. Détrompez-vous, Nvidia n’a pas souhaité attendre et a préféré prendre les devants dans cette future bataille qui s’annonce colossale. Pour s’armer, quoi de mieux que d’adjoindre le fameux Ti à cette nouvelle carte ? Voici donc la GTX 980 Ti, qui reprend beaucoup d’éléments aperçus dans la fameuse Titan X, tout en promettant d’être plus accessible. Maxwell revient donc pour un tour de piste et le but avoué est d’aboutir à la meilleure carte gamer possible chez Nvidia. La question est simple : cette GTX 980 Ti est-elle la carte ultime autour de l’architecture Maxwell et la Bataille de Juin s’annonce-t-elle splendide ?
Graphic cards
I would have to say that price is probably the most important feature when you consider the GeForce GTX 980Ti, UHD and Ultra-Wide gaming are becoming increasingly popular up until now that required a minimum of two video cards.
Graphic cards
Nvidia sorgt vor: Mit einer Leistung auf Niveau der GeForce GTX Titan X muss die GeForce GTX 980 Ti dem nächsten Flaggschiff von AMD Paroli bieten.
Graphic cards
After taking a look at the Titan X last week it really got me thinking. Currently you can pick up two GTX 980s for the price of one Titan X. That leaves me wondering how well two GTX 980s would perform in SLI compared to the Titan X. Well it just so happens I had two GTX 980’s in use in the office so I put them to the test. Today I’m going to take a quick look at their performance and see if they are a better buy than a single Titan X.
Graphic cards
The EVGA GTX 980Ti SC had no problem playing some of the most demanding DX11 games at 4K resolutions. This is the first single card under a $700.00 USD price point that can make that claim.
Graphic cards
We recently reviewed the Sapphire Radeon R9 290X Vapor-X Tri-X in preparation for the AMD Radeon R9 300 Series release and to be honest, we were a little underwhelmed by the card. Still a strong contender in the high end graphics market but in the shadow of the GTX970 from Nvidia, not to mention the GTX980 or GTX980 Ti. So a couple of days ago we tuned into the live broadcast and we got a sense of excitement from the event, it seems like AMD are really proud of the R9 300 Series release and the supporting product ranges they launched on that day.
Graphic cards
When you think of graphics cards and manufacturers, you automatically think of NVIDIA and the GTX range; regardless of what side of the fence you are on. Without a doubt, they produce some of the best graphics cards in the world, but that performance comes at a hefty price, the current most powerful single GPU card sits at around $950; not exactly sofa change. Today we have the newest Maxwell based graphics card and the first (and likely only) Ti model of the GTX 900 series; the GeForce GTX 980Ti.
Graphic cards
So last week we had our first peak at the kind of new R9 380. Well it just so happens that card was only a 2GB model. Lucky for us PowerColor sent over their PCS+ R9 380 and it has a 4GB frame buffer. So today I’m going to check out the card from PowerColor and see what they have going on and along with that we can see if having the additional frame buffer is worth it in our benchmark suite. With these cards not exactly being focused towards higher resolution gameplay I’m not sure if we will see too much at 1080p but given the 1440p numbers we saw before I bet we see some improvement there!
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