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May 31st, 2005, 04:42 PM
#1
Registered User
READ: ATI announces CrossFire multi-VPU platform
ATI has finally unveiled their answer to NVIDIA's SLI solution to pair up videocards: Crossfire. ATI's solution allows you to buy a Crossfire edition of an X800 or X850 powered videocard, and mix that with any regular card with the same chipset from whatever manufacturer. It means that those who already own a X800 or a X850 PCIe based video card already have the first component of a CrossFire solution. The second component is a CATALYST driver that supports CrossFire. The last two components unfortunately, do cost money and they are the following - A RADEON CrossFire Edition Graphics Card with Compositing Engine + CrossFire certified motherboard. How it Works?
Because ATI does not have an internal connector piece between the two cards, they require an external dongle much like the Voodoo 2. The DVI out of the original RADEON X card gets fed into the CrossFire Edition's DMS port which is basically a digital input feeding the compositing engine. End users however, will not lose the use of the DVI port as ATI will provide a Y connector that will still allow an output. There is system memory overhead to help with the synchronization of the two cards. After each card is finished rendering, the combined output of the video cards is sent out of the video card and shown on the display.
Breaking things down here, ATi is claiming an approximate 25% performance boost in aging game titles like Unreal Tournament 2003. Further they are reporting a ~ 75% increase in the OpenGL based Return To Castle Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory. Lastly we see a near 100% increase in performance for Splinter Cell, which we assume to be the original title, as apposed to the recently released Chaos Theory addition to the series. The main take-away here is that depending on whether the game engine is CPU or Graphics bound, you'll see varying degrees performance improvements afforded by CrossFire Multi-GPU rendering. Again the flip side of that is, if you have a game already running at blazing frame-rates with a single card, with CrossFire you can turn up to new levels of 10X and 14X "Super AA" and see the benefits of the image quality, while multiple GPUs keep up high frame rate. This of course is all theoretical commentary for us at this point. The first previews can be found on Neoseeker, HardOCP, Beyon3D, AnandTech, T-Break, AMDZone, TechReport, HotHardware.
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June 3rd, 2005, 11:44 AM
#2
Registered User
It's about time.
I wonder if it means that Crossfire isn't chipset-dependent. Hrm... being able to run either SLI nVidia or ATI would be quite a boon for us consumers.
"I aspire sir, to be better than I am." -- Data, Star Trek: Nemesis
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June 3rd, 2005, 01:57 PM
#3
Registered User
regular card with the same chipset from whatever manufacturer
it means any card manufacturer, i dont think it refers to chipset mfg.
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June 3rd, 2005, 10:39 PM
#4
Registered User
Originally Posted by TechZ
it means any card manufacturer, i dont think it refers to chipset mfg.
Originally Posted by TechZ
...CrossFire certified motherboard.
That was the piece I was referring to -- I'm curious as to how a board is made 'crossfire certified'
"I aspire sir, to be better than I am." -- Data, Star Trek: Nemesis
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