Looks quite an interesting technology:
http://techreport.com/articles.x/17934/2
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Looks quite an interesting technology:
http://techreport.com/articles.x/17934/2
thought nvidia had killed this off?
Isn't this the technology that claimed to far outstrip SLI/Crossfire performance by generating different parts of the image with different cards rather than AFR?
I think I might've read about it a year or so back, but I'm not sure...
I'd like to be proven wrong, but I can see this adding considerable input lag.
It seems good but too many limitations for my liking.
No Dx11 support (needs developing), lowest common denominator on things like AA, looks like Physx/CUDA doesn't work etc etc
What would be awesome (but highly unlikely) would be AMD and nVidia getting on board and helping them. At the end of the say, this chip could help them sell more gfx cards.......although I doubt either will see it that way.
I seem to remember reading that Lucid was a small Israeli (?) company, but had financial backing from Intel. That vague memory though is probably based on an article iirc was on Anandtech just posting this up as a possible future tech.
I think this does open up SLI/crossfire type set ups for far more people, especially people like me that tend to upgrade slowly. I know it's been a bit more feasible recently with the cheaper ATI cards, but usually buying one more expensive card has been better than 2 cheaper ones. And as I'm such a slow upgrader, by the time I would look at getting a second card to match the first, newer cards would have come out which would be a far better option than SLI/crossfire.
This Hydra thing though could really help people like me - If the 8800GT could work (flawlessly) in tandem with a cheap 4870, it would make it a very tempting upgrade.
Just to revive this thread is there any more news on it as their website states that the Hydra 200 is in mass production currently... but i dont see any motherboard manufacturers mentioning it.
Where are they all going? :s