<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>I remember when 8x AGP was all the rage.
8x AGP received a lot of publicity and marketing dollars. Its performance
benefit over AGP4x/2x is non-existent in real-world games. See:
http://www.sudhian.com/showdocs.cfm?aid=554
> I've got a 128MB GeForce4
> MX440 8xAGP card w/TV-out, and I'm planning on building a 3200+
> Venice-powered GA-K8U-939 with 2x1024 Patriot DDR400 (cost of
> MB+CPU+RAM=$321.ish) to take advantage of it. (I'm looking into Eve
> Online and some other MMPOGs).
You have a MX440 and actually plan to build a system *around* it to play
games? The MX440 is a cheap, low-end card, four generations old, based on
Geforce2 MX technology, circa 1999. The MX440 would be an enormous
bottleneck in the system you are planning.
> At the same time, the A8R-MVP low-cost SLI board looks real nice, but I
> don't know if I feel the need to fork over $xxx on a PCI-express x16
> ATI card (the A8R runs ATI's Crossfire northbridge + Uli(?) southbridge
> providing actual SATA2, gigEth, etc,etc,etc). Besides, the A8R only
> allows 16x with a single PCIe video card; if you instal two, they both
> drop to 8x.
Yes, and PCIe x8 is overkill for any video card today. NVidia NF4 SLI x16
motherboards, with 16 lanes to each video card, perform no better than the
old NF4 SLI boards, which split the lanes to 2x8. For the same reasons, all
else being equal, expect *zero* performance gains from RD580 over the RD480
chipset.
The primary reason for RD580's existence is having an *ATi-branded*
southbridge that supports SATA2, GigE, full-speed USB 2.0, etc. The consumer
shouldn't care whose logo goes on the chipset as long as it works. The
existing RD480 + ULi solution works just fine.
The primary reason to upgrade to a PCIe motherboard now is to be able to use
the latest generation video cards, as they are no longer offered in AGP
form. That, or if you want to build a low-cost RAID5 server and stick a RAID
controller card in the PCIe slot.
--
"War is the continuation of politics by other means.
It can therefore be said that politics is war without
bloodshed while war is politics with bloodshed."