Uwe Here is a review <http://www.guru3d.com/article/geforce-gtx-580-review/> of the 580, and note on page 2 their chart comparing features between various nVidia GPU's. Lee From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Uwe Soltau Sent: Friday, January 21, 2011 6:20 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [AP] graphic card Gregg, thanks for the info. It took me a while to digest it and the problem is I still do not understand most of the things in the specification. Can't even find pixel shader units etc. so will have to spend much more time on this.
I should actually get a completely new computer but can unfortunately not afford that right now. I thought I will upgrade in stages. I thought I get a better graphics card (Cuda) and stick it in my present computer hopefully getting some improvement on the performance. I would than at a later stage get a new computer and use this card in it. I now discovered that the new cards are all for PCIe 2.0 x 16. My motherboard has only a PCIe x 16 slot. Will such a card work on such a motherboard (backwards compatible) obviously with reduced performance? At the moment the AVCHD clips play on the timeline but as soon as I add something like a transition, effect, picture in picture, etc playback is jurky. I do not need a super! computer, as long as it will play what I mentioned just now I would be happy (for the moment). The odd more complex part I would render for preview, time is no issue for me. Do you think a better graphics card alone would help at all? I remember many years back I had a 4Gb card and used Premiere 4 (Not CS4) when I changed to Premiere 5 (again not CS5) the timeline would not play at all. I got a 16Mb card and everything work well without any other change to the computer. I hope that it would work as well in this case. Thanks for the help Uwe > Here's a page to study before buying a video card with an nVidia GPU. > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Nvidia_graphics_processing_units > > nVidia doesn't make cards. They do make what they call "reference > designs" and may even supply unpopulated circuit boards to some > manufacturers to put the nVidia chips on while sourcing the rest of > the components elsewhere. > > The lower priced cards tend to be built on reference design boards or > the manufacturer makes their boards as exact or nearly exact clones of > them. > > The mid to high end cards use the GPU makers' information but the > entire board is an in-house design. > > What you need to look at on a video card is the exact version of the > GPU. nVidia has long made "feature reduced" versions of their chips > starting soon after each new design is released. You don't want to get > stuck with one that has fewer pixel shader units or half the pipelines > than the top of the line GPU in a given series. > > In some cases, one or two chips of a new design generation have been > worse overall performers than the best of the previous generation. > > Many companies have been nothing but designers and producers of board > kits they'd sell to any other company to solder together. Trident > Micro did it for a long time with their video cards. Almost every > board with a Trident video chip had an FCC ID registered to Trident, > but they "weren't the manufacturer" because it wasn't assembled in a > Trident owned factory. > > PC Chips is still going strong doing the same as a non-manufacturer of > PC motherboards, even though some of them have a PC Chips label. I'm > not so certain they actually assemble anything. There are several mid > to low end board brands that use mostly PC Chips designs and big OEMs > like HP and Compaq have had PC Chips design their boards. > > ATi and 3DFX did make nearly all of the video cards using their video > chips and GPUs. 3DFX basically ran out of both engineering talent and > money, on their last prototypes they couldn't get the power > consumption down to usable levels and their then current production > designs were getting eclipsed by nVidia's latest. nVidia bought 3DFX, > threw a bunch of their money at what 3DFX had been working on at the > end and pushed it out as the GeForce FX 5xxx series - to near disaster > as the drivers still needed a ton of work to get decent performance. > > I don't know what was happening at ATi, why they sold to AMD. Maybe > AMD just waved a large enough amount of money at ATi's owners. > > But for GPUs, nVidia and ATi (as a division of AMD) are pretty much it > now for laptop and desktop discreet GPUs. AMD also produces chipsets > (nForce) with integrated nVidia GPUs. Intel made some noises recently > about returning to the discreet GPU business, but AFAIK nothing's come > of it yet. People still remember their utterly horrible i740. Intel > has made chipsets with integrated GPUs for a long time, but their best > is still behind even the midrange nForce chipsets. > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] ------------------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Adobe-Premiere/ <*> Your email settings: Individual Email | Traditional <*> To change settings online go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Adobe-Premiere/join (Yahoo! ID required) <*> To change settings via email: [email protected] [email protected] <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: [email protected] <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
