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ASUS ARES CrossFire |
| Wed, July 07 2010 | 4:12PM | PermaLink |
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In this review we test two ASUS ARES cards in a 4-GPU CrossFire combination. With a total price of $2000 for those cards this is certainly not for everybody. For additional reference we also combined the ARES with a HD 5970 and a HD 5870.
$2,000 CONCLUSION: "2x ARES: This is clearly the optimum solution, but also the most expensive. Compared to the previous configurations we only see noteworthy gains in Crysis, Stalker: Clear Sky, Metro 2033 and Unigine: Heaven. It comes as no surprise that these are also the only titles in our benchmark suite that run at below 100 FPS when played on a dual ARES at 2560x1600."
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FULL STORY @
Archived from TECHPOWERUP
http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/ASUS/ARES_CrossFire
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Sparkle GTX260 Core 216 GeForce GTX 260 Videocard Review |
| Tue, May 26 2009 | 1:09AM | PermaLink |
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Sparkle's GTX260 Core 216 videocard packs in 896MB of onboard GDDR3 memory, is PCI Express 2.0 x16 compliant and retails for about $210 CDN. The Geforce GX 260 core on Sparkle's videocard is clocked at the default speed of 576MHz, the shaders hum away at 1242MHz, while the GDDR3 memory runs at an even 999MHz. As you might expect, this dual-slot wide graphics card incorporates nVidia Physx, Cuda, and Hybridpower. From the graphics and eyecandy perspective the Geforce GTX260 GPU supports DirectX10, Shader Model 4.0, OpenGL 2.1, and 128-bit HDR.
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FULL STORY @
Archived from PCSTATS
http://www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm?articleID=2398
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