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InformationX-bit Labs for mobile users! Do not forget that we are running a special version of X-bit Labs web-site for users of mobile and handheld devices: http://pda.xbitlabs.com. Check out our news and articles from smartphones and PDAs to be always updated on the latest computer and technology news. <%BANNER[right_130x600]%>
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Articles: Video
Mainstream Market Gets GeForce 6: NVIDIA GeForce 6600 GT on AGP 8x ReviewCategory: Video [ 02/17/2005 | 10:29 AM ] PCI Express is conquering the personal computer market step by step, but what if you feel your current PC performance in general is enough for you and want an affordable AGP 8x graphics card upgrade that would allow you to play the modern games and have some future proof? Perhaps, NVIDIA’s GeForce 6600 GT AGP will be a good choice for you. Table of contents:
In our article devoted to the announcement of the NVIDIA GeForce 6600 GPU we said that the company had problems positioning its produce in the retail market due to the lack of a modern and fast mainstream graphics processor for the AGP 8x bus (For more details please see our review called Knowing the Depths: NVIDIA GeForce 6600 GT Architecture).
The release of the GeForce 6600 alleviated the problem somewhat, but didn’t remove it altogether. Why? Because the GeForce 6600 was originally developed for the PCI Express platform. The PCI Express bus is rapidly gaining popularity, that’s true, but the majority of PCs are still equipped with the older AGP interface. Thus, NVIDIA found itself incapable of offering an affordable mainstream graphic card for the general body of PC users even after the release of the GeForce 6600. Graphics cards of the GeForce FX family didn’t suit for that role as their architecture couldn’t manage modern games like Far Cry, for example. Moreover, graphics cards based on ATI’s RADEONs had already conquered almost the whole market of ready-made PCI Express systems among the major PC manufacturers in middle 2004, making it impossible for NVIDIA to become competitive with its GeForce 6 series in the fall of the same year. Yet NVIDIA found a solution at last – it was the same small chip they had used in the GeForce PCX 5750 and PCX 5900. We mean the NVIDIA HSI bridge that added the PCI Express interface to products originally intended for the AGP bus. By a lucky chance NVIDIA’s retrograde approach to building its first PCI Express compatibles served it well now, allowing for an elegant transition of the GeForce 6600 processor to the AGP platform. The NVIDIA HSI bridge can work in either direction, so NVIDIA had only to design an appropriate PCB, with space left for a HSI chip, to make an AGP version of the GeForce 6600 GT. Thus, NVIDIA very easily complemented its product line-up with a new mainstream AGP graphics card capable of challenging such time-tested solutions as ATI’s RADEON 9800 XT and PRO. It is to the AGP-interfaced GeForce 6600 GT that this review is dedicated. <%BANNER[banner_468x30]%>
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Category NewsCategory: Video Thursday, July 17, 20085:48 am Microsoft Preps to Unveil DirectX 11 Features in Several Days. ATI, Nvidia, Microsoft to Discuss DirectX 11 Techniques at XNA, Siggraph Wednesday, July 16, 200812:30 pm New Generation ATI Radeon for Mainstream, Mobile Markets are Ready. PCI-SIG Approves ATI RV730, M98-L, M96 Graphics Chips 7:22 am EVGA and XFX Reimburse Price Difference on GeForce GTX 200 after Price Collapse. EVGA and XFX to Return Money to GeForce GTX 200 Purchasers Tuesday, July 15, 20084:23 pm Startup Promises to Revolutionize Multi-GPU Technology Early Next Year. LucidLogix Unveils Hydra Distributed Processing Engine Friday, July 11, 200810:26 pm AMD Plans to Launch Two Dual-Chip ATI Radeon HD 4800 Graphics Cards. ATI Touts 8-Way ATI CrossFireX Multi-GPU Technology All Latest News <%BANNER[right_130x130_1]%>
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