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December 22nd, 2004, 01:46 AM
#1
Member
PCIX versus AGP
The new PCI-X slot runs at 16-X in compharison to the 8-X AGP slot, which is great that technology has advanced like that. But, it only runs in Intel machines and it cost more then a over-clocked ati-radeon. Not only that, but there is no software i'm aware of that even needs that much power. So is it even worth buying?
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December 22nd, 2004, 02:20 AM
#2
Getting PCI-X right now is a very bad choice. Wait 6-8 months for the tech to mature and stabailize a little and then buy it. It will be cheaper and have less problems.
[H]ard|OCP <--Best hardware/gaming news out there--|
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Light a man a fire and you\'ll keep him warm for a day, Light a man ON fire and you\'ll keep him warm the rest of his life.
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December 22nd, 2004, 04:40 AM
#3
What about PCIe? I've heard that's the way to go these days.
Is there a sum of an inifinite geometric series? Well, that all depends on what you consider a negligible amount.
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December 22nd, 2004, 04:56 AM
#4
PCIe and PCIX both mean PCI eXpress. It's not the way to go quite yet for the average consumer. Rich guy, yes, normal consumer like most of us here, no.
[H]ard|OCP <--Best hardware/gaming news out there--|
pwned.nl <--Gamers will love this one --|
Light a man a fire and you\'ll keep him warm for a day, Light a man ON fire and you\'ll keep him warm the rest of his life.
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December 22nd, 2004, 05:28 AM
#5
Member
Very true, if only I had oddles of money to waste on really, really fancy stuff...
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December 22nd, 2004, 06:06 AM
#6
Re: PCIX versus AGP
Originally posted here by GArrigotti
But, it only runs in Intel machines and it cost more then a over-clocked ati-radeon. Not only that, but there is no software i'm aware of that even needs that much power. So is it even worth buying?
1. It does not only run in Intel machines. PCIe is an interconnect standard, and can be employed wherever any manufacturer sees fit (provided they pay licensing fees and such).
2. There is software *NOW* that requires it, but it's generally in the realm of gaming, and only makes a difference on the higher end cards. *HOWEVER*, a big area where it can have a huge impact is on cards that use shared memory. Integrated video can then access system ram that much faster, and though it keeps latency high, any bit of bandwidth makes a difference to shared video.
3. It's not JUST for graphics cards. It allows 10Gbps NICs to have a decent amount of bandwidth to the system, and allows for multiple 1Gbps NICs on the bus without oversaturating it.
Originally posted here by The Grunt
PCIe and PCIX both mean PCI eXpress.
This is incorrect. PCIe is PCI-Express, PCI-X is those higher bandwidth PCI slots you see in servers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PCI
Chris Shepherd
The Nelson-Shepherd cutoff: The point at which you realise someone is an idiot while trying to help them.
\"Well as far as the spelling, I speak fluently both your native languages. Do you even can try spell mine ?\" -- Failed Insult
Is your whole family retarded, or did they just catch it from you?
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December 22nd, 2004, 06:13 AM
#7
Some searching has showed my error. PCI-X is a standard for pci that is old now and has to do with the 64 channels comm'ing at 133mhz. PCIe is what we're talking about.
Is there a sum of an inifinite geometric series? Well, that all depends on what you consider a negligible amount.
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