Hi Dirk

This might actually be a hardware affect rather than a software effect.
The GeForce4
is undoubtably quicker that the GeForce 2 bu there comes a time when the
actual CPU is lagging behind in the amount of data it can pass to the GPU-
this also includes other limitations such as the graphics apature size
setting in the bios, the amount of RAM available to the machine and the
speed of the AGP BUS. Putting a GeForce4 into a PIII means the GPU will be
idling a lot probably upgrading the motherboard, RAM and CPU will yield
improvements, better graphics cards most likely won't.

Jules

On Wed, 8 Jan 2003, Dirk Kostrewa wrote:

> Dear Gordon,
>
> I assume that you changed the default "nv" driver in your XF86config(-4) file
> to the Nvidia driver "nvidia". I've replaced on my private Pentium III (733
> MHz) PC a GeForce2 GTS against a GeForce4 Ti4200 and I also observe less
> improvement than expected. Here are my observations:
> 1. Under Windows98SE with 3DMark2001 I get a ~50 % higher score, which is
> probably okay.
> 2. Under Linux I get a ~ doubled frame rate for the simple OpenGL benchmark
> program "gears" in full-screen mode and somewhat less than this in the
> Vulpine OpenGL Mark, which is fine (Nvidia driver 31.23).
> 3. But, puzzlingly with pymol and on-screen rendering of a complex secondary
> structure sketch (without ray-tracing) I only get a moderate increase (~ 10
> %, or so) of the movie frame rate compared to a Geforce2MX440 running on a
> Pentium III (450 MHz) in my office! Here, I would really expect a huge
> difference in frame rate. I also don't understand this. A possible
> explanation would be that pymol, upon automatic detection of the graphics
> card, internally changes the complexity of the calculations resulting in a
> slower but improved image?
>
> Best regards,
>
> Dirk.
>
> On Wednesday 08 January 2003 09:40, gordon wrote:
> > Hi
> > I recently upgraded from a geforce 2 to a geforce 4 ti4200, and I don't
> > really notice a performance improvment (running linux). I judge this
> > based on how smoothly large sized proteins can be rotated with spheres
> > on.
> > Just wondering why?
>


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