http://www.oc.com.tw/article/0509/re...le.asp?id=4417
lol Well to do that you need a lot of cash from somewhere anyhow...
Is it genuine? Apologies if posted elsewhere
http://www.oc.com.tw/article/0509/re...le.asp?id=4417
lol Well to do that you need a lot of cash from somewhere anyhow...
Is it genuine? Apologies if posted elsewhere
Wow! Dual SLI config?!!!
I did not think that was possible? Dual Sli?
Perhaps its 2 x NF4 chipsets?
I think it is possible using the new 16x sli setups ie 4 per card
I did read somewhere of a motherboard that used 2 different NF4 chipsets to do this.. I think actually 1 x AMD chipset & 1 x Intel.... but I can't remember which one...
It's a whole page of ???? for me as well I got jist of it thoOriginally Posted by PrivatePyle
Living and dying laughing and crying
Once you have seen it you will never be the same
Life in the fast lane is just how it seems
Hard and it is heavy dirty and mean
That's chinese not japanese.
ROFL.. easier just to say it's all in "Foreign" tbh...
Originally Posted by The Quentos
I saw boxes too. However, I saw several banners that were chinese. I also noticed the .tw country code, wich is taiwan (aka the republic of china). I therefore infered that the languange of the rest of the page was some form of chinese.Originally Posted by PrivatePyle
Anyway, I don't see any real use for two SLI setups in the same system, but I supposed having piles of PCI-E lanes has it's pros. You could have an SLI set up and then have room for a high-end RAID card or something.
Traditional Chinese I think.
manadrin or tangerine?
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Problem with current SLI systems is that few apps actually benefit from it. Seems like marketing hype once again.
There's no technical reason why you couldn't use a huge number of graphics cards in an SLI config. If you can split the screen into two for rendering, then you can split in into four, or eight or whatever. This board was announced some time ago and uses a second chipset to get an extra 16 lanes of PCI-E; presumably in a quad card configuration each card gets 8 lanes. Asus have recently announced an SLI S939 board with two chipsets to give each card in an SLI config a full 16 lanes- although as I understand it the second chipset hangs off the first which presumably results in a latency penalty.
The big problem with the above linked setup as I see it is that their doesn't seem to be a four way SLI bridge connector, and it's most likely that the cards are not designed to use one even if it existed. The cards therefore would seem to be running in bridgeless SLI mode- and from the benchmarks I've seen, bridgeless SLI mode is very inefficient, giving only 15-20% performance increases on 6600 cards (which you would think would require less card-to-card communication than faster cards like the 7800GT.
Edit: I suppose there's no reason why you couldn't bridge the cards in a 2x2 configuration and then use them to run two screens though.
Last edited by Rave; 23-09-2005 at 12:50 PM.
Thats just overkill IMO.
Although it would be cool. "Oh yeah I just upgraded, Athlon X2 6000 with 4 x Geforce 7800GTX" ...
My other PC is a shuttle ...
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