- Jun 21, 2005
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Originally posted by: error8
GTX 260 C216 kicks 4870 1 gb in the nuts in both vista and windows 7, in this review.
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
GTX 260 C216 kicks 4870 1 gb in the nuts in both vista and windows 7, in this review.
Depends if you are willing to deal with the Nvidia driver instability to get that extra 10-15%, under Win7.
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
GTX 260 C216 kicks 4870 1 gb in the nuts in both vista and windows 7, in this review.
Depends if you are willing to deal with the Nvidia driver instability to get that extra 10-15%, under Win7.
Thanks for the troll comment here.
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
GTX 260 C216 kicks 4870 1 gb in the nuts in both vista and windows 7, in this review.
Depends if you are willing to deal with the Nvidia driver instability to get that extra 10-15%, under Win7.
Thanks for the troll comment here.
How is that a troll comment? The review site stated that Nvidia drivers caused instability under Win7.
When I had Win7 installed on my laptop (8600gt video), the display driver frequently crapped out.
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
So we are talking about a 5% loss in framerates, with a 4-month old driver, in a beta OS? That's not "instability", and what about the long load times with the AMD card, it's like a fanboy to gloss over that. I'm sure that is not "instability" though, it's a "feature".
I have used a GTX260 and GTX285 on Win7 with zero issues (not that this means it is "rock-solid" by any means).
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
GTX 260 C216 kicks 4870 1 gb in the nuts in both vista and windows 7, in this review.
Depends if you are willing to deal with the Nvidia driver instability to get that extra 10-15%, under Win7.
Thanks for the troll comment here.
How is that a troll comment? The review site stated that Nvidia drivers caused instability under Win7.
When I had Win7 installed on my laptop (8600gt video), the display driver frequently crapped out.
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
GTX 260 C216 kicks 4870 1 gb in the nuts in both vista and windows 7, in this review.
Depends if you are willing to deal with the Nvidia driver instability to get that extra 10-15%, under Win7.
Thanks for the troll comment here.
How is that a troll comment? The review site stated that Nvidia drivers caused instability under Win7.
When I had Win7 installed on my laptop (8600gt video), the display driver frequently crapped out.
Here are some exceeprts from the article:
After days and days of testing, the results are actually LESS exciting than I'd hoped they would be; but I think in the end that is a good thing. Performance for all seven graphics cards we tested was at least CLOSE when comparing Windows 7 and Windows Vista results. In a few cases, especially with Far Cry 2, the NVIDIA driver you can download today is simply not up to the quality we expected from the GeForce-giant. Even in other games, where the average frame rate would only drop 5% or less, the difference was notable at least to us in graphs if not in real-world experiences.
Other than that, using Windows 7 was terrific - fast, reliable (only one crash during a game resolution change over 378 tests) and nice to look at as well.
I will offer one note, that doesn't apply to just Windows 7, but Vista as well: game loading times with the AMD graphics cards and Catalyst 9.3 driver were much, much higher than those with any NVIDIA GPU and associated driver. As an example, our Call of Duty: World at War save game would load in about 12-15 seconds with NVIDIA's cards but that same load time took 30+ seconds with AMD configurations.
So we are talking about a 5% loss in framerates, with a 4-month old driver, in a beta OS? That's not "instability", and what about the long load times with the AMD card, it's like a fanboy to gloss over that. I'm sure that is not "instability" though, it's a "feature".
I have used a GTX260 and GTX285 on Win7 with zero issues (not that this means it is "rock-solid" by any means).
Originally posted by: akugami
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
GTX 260 C216 kicks 4870 1 gb in the nuts in both vista and windows 7, in this review.
Depends if you are willing to deal with the Nvidia driver instability to get that extra 10-15%, under Win7.
Thanks for the troll comment here.
How is that a troll comment? The review site stated that Nvidia drivers caused instability under Win7.
When I had Win7 installed on my laptop (8600gt video), the display driver frequently crapped out.
It is a trollish comment. Why? Because it's pretty much a given that any drivers out for Win7 is a beta driver at this point. Win7 hasn't even hit release candidate status yet much less hit gold master status. Now, granted Vista and Win7 share a lot so that minimal work is needed to get a Vista driver working in Win7 but there are differences and these differences need to be ironed out.
There is also the fact that Win7 is in beta and there may still be significant bugs that are causing the instabilities and not the fault of the drivers itself. As Win7 gets more stable so should the drivers for it.
I currently have a 4870 512MB card. My last card was an 8800 GTS and the one before that was 1900XT. No fanboyism. Just my opinion.
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
GTX 260 C216 kicks 4870 1 gb in the nuts in both vista and windows 7, in this review.
Depends if you are willing to deal with the Nvidia driver instability to get that extra 10-15%, under Win7.
Thanks for the troll comment here.
How is that a troll comment? The review site stated that Nvidia drivers caused instability under Win7.
When I had Win7 installed on my laptop (8600gt video), the display driver frequently crapped out.
Here are some exceeprts from the article:
After days and days of testing, the results are actually LESS exciting than I'd hoped they would be; but I think in the end that is a good thing. Performance for all seven graphics cards we tested was at least CLOSE when comparing Windows 7 and Windows Vista results. In a few cases, especially with Far Cry 2, the NVIDIA driver you can download today is simply not up to the quality we expected from the GeForce-giant. Even in other games, where the average frame rate would only drop 5% or less, the difference was notable at least to us in graphs if not in real-world experiences.
Other than that, using Windows 7 was terrific - fast, reliable (only one crash during a game resolution change over 378 tests) and nice to look at as well.
I will offer one note, that doesn't apply to just Windows 7, but Vista as well: game loading times with the AMD graphics cards and Catalyst 9.3 driver were much, much higher than those with any NVIDIA GPU and associated driver. As an example, our Call of Duty: World at War save game would load in about 12-15 seconds with NVIDIA's cards but that same load time took 30+ seconds with AMD configurations.
So we are talking about a 5% loss in framerates, with a 4-month old driver, in a beta OS? That's not "instability", and what about the long load times with the AMD card, it's like a fanboy to gloss over that. I'm sure that is not "instability" though, it's a "feature".
I have used a GTX260 and GTX285 on Win7 with zero issues (not that this means it is "rock-solid" by any means).
Originally posted by: WaTaGuMp
People switched from using XP? This is an outrage.
Originally posted by: WaTaGuMp
People switched from using XP? This is an outrage.
Originally posted by: error8
Originally posted by: WaTaGuMp
People switched from using XP? This is an outrage.
So what makes you still keep it?
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
Originally posted by: WaTaGuMp
People switched from using XP? This is an outrage.
So what makes you still keep it?
Don't some games actually run better with DX10 vs DX9? FC2?
Originally posted by: Redmist
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
Originally posted by: WaTaGuMp
People switched from using XP? This is an outrage.
So what makes you still keep it?
Don't some games actually run better with DX10 vs DX9? FC2?
every game I have played in DX10 mode runs slower than DX9 EXCEPT FC2, that seems to be the only game that makes sense of DX10.
whenever I read up on DX10 I was always under the impression that its supposed to have better looking visuals and utilize more cpu and other resources so the game would run better and look better but it seems all games in DX10 mode have sun rays and run like shit.
Originally posted by: bryanW1995
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
GTX 260 C216 kicks 4870 1 gb in the nuts in both vista and windows 7, in this review.
Depends if you are willing to deal with the Nvidia driver instability to get that extra 10-15%, under Win7.
Thanks for the troll comment here.
How is that a troll comment? The review site stated that Nvidia drivers caused instability under Win7.
When I had Win7 installed on my laptop (8600gt video), the display driver frequently crapped out.
Here are some exceeprts from the article:
After days and days of testing, the results are actually LESS exciting than I'd hoped they would be; but I think in the end that is a good thing. Performance for all seven graphics cards we tested was at least CLOSE when comparing Windows 7 and Windows Vista results. In a few cases, especially with Far Cry 2, the NVIDIA driver you can download today is simply not up to the quality we expected from the GeForce-giant. Even in other games, where the average frame rate would only drop 5% or less, the difference was notable at least to us in graphs if not in real-world experiences.
Other than that, using Windows 7 was terrific - fast, reliable (only one crash during a game resolution change over 378 tests) and nice to look at as well.
I will offer one note, that doesn't apply to just Windows 7, but Vista as well: game loading times with the AMD graphics cards and Catalyst 9.3 driver were much, much higher than those with any NVIDIA GPU and associated driver. As an example, our Call of Duty: World at War save game would load in about 12-15 seconds with NVIDIA's cards but that same load time took 30+ seconds with AMD configurations.
So we are talking about a 5% loss in framerates, with a 4-month old driver, in a beta OS? That's not "instability", and what about the long load times with the AMD card, it's like a fanboy to gloss over that. I'm sure that is not "instability" though, it's a "feature".
I have used a GTX260 and GTX285 on Win7 with zero issues (not that this means it is "rock-solid" by any means).
you know, it's funny that they mentioned that. titan quest loads a LOT faster now that I'm using the gtx 260. twimtbp at work, an evil conspiracy, or nvidia just focused on optimizing load times?
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Originally posted by: Flipped Gazelle
Originally posted by: error8
GTX 260 C216 kicks 4870 1 gb in the nuts in both vista and windows 7, in this review.
Depends if you are willing to deal with the Nvidia driver instability to get that extra 10-15%, under Win7.
Thanks for the troll comment here.
Originally posted by: ExarKun333
Hopefully Nvidia gets their act together and actually does release updates drivers in April. They will be under a lot of pressure to have quality drivers after the Vista debacle.
Originally posted by: Astrallite
Power consumption is higher on nvidia cards because the clockrates aren't throttling down during desktop use.