Nvidia's G92 GPU does not get a 512-bit memory bus interface - they stay with 384-bit

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http://theinquirer.net/?article=42015


G92 is a high-end chip, sports 384-bit controller

INQ moves to clear the confusion

By Theo Valich
RUMOUR HAS IT that upcoming G92 is a mainstream chip, not the high-end
refresh that the net has been wibbling about.

Well, we can tell you that this rumour is nothing else but a bit of
good old FUD, since either G92 is a high-end refresh or the company
decided that a replacement for 8800GTS will be significantly faster
than GeForce 8800 Ultra, leaving its high-end offering in shambles.

This baby sports some serious shading power, but more important is the
fact that the memory installed on board is now GDDR4. 768MB of GDDR4,
to be more precise. The amount of memory discards rumours of 256-bit
bus, since it is obvious that Nvidia will keep 384-bit memory
controller for the high-end series of products. We would welcome this
memory controller in mainstream arena, though.

The bandwidth has now jumped over the 105 GB/s barrier, and it remains
to be seen what will be the final clock of the memory - our estimate
is between 1.0 and 1.2 GHz, or 2.0-2.4 GHz, but final clocks are far,
far from being decided. The company needs to get the revised chip
first, in order to have DisplayPort working nice and cleanly. Display
Port is required for this company to get the Dell XPS contract - a new
machine will be launched for Winter 2007/08, probably during CES 2008
in Las Vegas.

The company has already had some revisions of the board sent to their
favourite game developers and other partners, and we can now tell you
that the board is almost identical to old 8800 GTX/Ultra ones.

We would like to see 1.5GB of memory on consumer boards as well - the
Quadro FX already spots 1.5GB of GDDR3 memory- but it is all a matter
of price. Qimonda's high-capacity GDDR3 sounds very tasty for Nvidia
plans, but for now. The reference boards sport Samsung GDDR4 chips.
 
http://theinquirer.net/?article=42015


G92 is a high-end chip, sports 384-bit controller

INQ moves to clear the confusion

By Theo Valich
RUMOUR HAS IT that upcoming G92 is a mainstream chip, not the high-end
refresh that the net has been wibbling about.

Well, we can tell you that this rumour is nothing else but a bit of
good old FUD, since either G92 is a high-end refresh or the company
decided that a replacement for 8800GTS will be significantly faster
than GeForce 8800 Ultra, leaving its high-end offering in shambles.

This baby sports some serious shading power, but more important is the
fact that the memory installed on board is now GDDR4. 768MB of GDDR4,
to be more precise. The amount of memory discards rumours of 256-bit
bus, since it is obvious that Nvidia will keep 384-bit memory
controller for the high-end series of products. We would welcome this
memory controller in mainstream arena, though.

The bandwidth has now jumped over the 105 GB/s barrier, and it remains
to be seen what will be the final clock of the memory - our estimate
is between 1.0 and 1.2 GHz, or 2.0-2.4 GHz, but final clocks are far,
far from being decided. The company needs to get the revised chip
first, in order to have DisplayPort working nice and cleanly. Display
Port is required for this company to get the Dell XPS contract - a new
machine will be launched for Winter 2007/08, probably during CES 2008
in Las Vegas.

The company has already had some revisions of the board sent to their
favourite game developers and other partners, and we can now tell you
that the board is almost identical to old 8800 GTX/Ultra ones.

We would like to see 1.5GB of memory on consumer boards as well - the
Quadro FX already spots 1.5GB of GDDR3 memory- but it is all a matter
of price. Qimonda's high-capacity GDDR3 sounds very tasty for Nvidia
plans, but for now. The reference boards sport Samsung GDDR4 chips.

Digitimes is far closer to the truth.

http://www.digitimes.com/news/a20070829PD216.html

nV has not been spending their design time since releasing the 8800
series just spinning their wheels. The Dx10 refresh
(second-generation) is a complete redesign, not just a 65nm shrink and
a significant performance boost for all members of the new series.

Do not expect the high-end GPUs to be first out of the chute. nVidia
is well aware of the lucrative $$/performance-gap between the 8600GTS
and the 8800GTS. They are also very anxious indeed to phase out the
huge, hot, low-yield G80 (8800-series) ASAP. The profit margin is
nowhere near what they would like it to be. A replacement for the
8800GTS with the performance of the 8800GTX initially at the same
price as the 8800GTS (and with a far bigger profit margin on the
smaller-geometry chip) would be just what the nV financial doctor
ordered. Volume would be huge and the ATi 2900 competition would be
totally wiped out. The current 8800 series would phase out rapidly.
And, of course, the genuine high-end version of the new series still
waiting in the wings.......

The (National) Inquirer lives up to its name....again...

Regardless of how the scenario plays out, anybody actually purchasing
the current 8800-family (any flavor) within the next few months may be
a very unhappy camper indeed by the turn of the year.

John Lewis
 
John said:
Digitimes is far closer to the truth.

http://www.digitimes.com/news/a20070829PD216.html

nV has not been spending their design time since releasing the 8800
series just spinning their wheels. The Dx10 refresh
(second-generation) is a complete redesign, not just a 65nm shrink and
a significant performance boost for all members of the new series.

Do not expect the high-end GPUs to be first out of the chute. nVidia
is well aware of the lucrative $$/performance-gap between the 8600GTS
and the 8800GTS. They are also very anxious indeed to phase out the
huge, hot, low-yield G80 (8800-series) ASAP. The profit margin is
nowhere near what they would like it to be. A replacement for the
8800GTS with the performance of the 8800GTX initially at the same
price as the 8800GTS (and with a far bigger profit margin on the
smaller-geometry chip) would be just what the nV financial doctor
ordered. Volume would be huge and the ATi 2900 competition would be
totally wiped out. The current 8800 series would phase out rapidly.
And, of course, the genuine high-end version of the new series still
waiting in the wings.......

The (National) Inquirer lives up to its name....again...

Regardless of how the scenario plays out, anybody actually purchasing
the current 8800-family (any flavor) within the next few months may be
a very unhappy camper indeed by the turn of the year.

John Lewis

I recently bought a new PC after 3-4 years (old one P4 3Gig with nVidia
7300 GPU - New one Core 2 Duo 6600 with 8800GTS). I have gone back to a
lot of my old games (eg Return to Castle Wolfenstein, etc) and cranked
up the graphics - lovely! I purchased FEAR and love running it with
everything cranked to the max.
I am a happy camper with the 8800 I have, but will be looking with
interest when the new gear comes out!

cheers
Gorby
 
Gorby said:
I recently bought a new PC after 3-4 years (old one P4 3Gig with nVidia
7300 GPU - New one Core 2 Duo 6600 with 8800GTS). I have gone back to a
lot of my old games (eg Return to Castle Wolfenstein, etc) and cranked up
the graphics - lovely! I purchased FEAR and love running it with
everything cranked to the max.
I am a happy camper with the 8800 I have, but will be looking with
interest when the new gear comes out!


Wow, sounds like you wrote that for me! I also just got a new box with a Duo
6600 and an 8800 GTS w/640 MB and have been re-loading old shooters to see
what I was missing with the old 6800. Lost Coast demo is remarkable!

I actually subbed in her to ask about a problem I'm having trying to update
the ATI drivers on a Sony Vaio VGN-S260 laptop. I'm having big issues with
the thing going to sleep and refusing to wake up, and an error report to M$
gave back the info that it looked like a graphic driver issue and that I
should update them. Unfortunately the XP OS from Sony doesn't seem to like
native ATI driver updates and the Sony support site doesn't list any drivers
newer than those installed, (listed as V. 6.14.10.6430). I don't know if
that's a Sony driver number or an ATI number, but the "Driver Provider" is
given as ATI Technologies, Inc.

FWIW, the file I tried to use to update the drivers was
6-11-pre-r300_xp_2k_dd_ccc_wdm_38185. I'd appreciate any suggestions people
may have.
 
Rem: The more memory a Graphic card has the more that memory has to use
upper
addresses & get in the way of main Mem ..a problem issue with 32 bit O/S 's
....with a surprising number of people using SLI 2 lots of 1 gig or more
would
cut of the main mem to around 2 Gig's .
mouse
@@
 
Trimble Bracegirdle said:
Rem: The more memory a Graphic card has the more that memory has to use
upper
addresses & get in the way of main Mem ..a problem issue with 32 bit O/S 's
...with a surprising number of people using SLI 2 lots of 1 gig or more
would
cut of the main mem to around 2 Gig's .
mouse
@@

You have no clue what you are talking about.
 
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