Is there an AMD64 SFF with PCI-express? If not, is there one coming before the end of the year?
It seems all the GPU's I'd really like are all in PCI-express for now (6600GT, X700)
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Starfalcon wrote:Going with PCIe in a SFF is rather pointless, as there are no PCIe cards except for video. So you would end up with a slot you would not be able to use, as there are no PCIe 1X cards yet.
Yes, but by this time next year you won't be able to find a "latest tech" top-end graphics card in anything other than PCI-E. If you plan on keeping your mobo for more than 2 years, and you expect to buy another top of the line graphics card in that timeframe, you want to get PCI-E. You'll be able to find mid-range cards, even using the latest chips, but the top end is going PCI-E only, very quickly. It's not about performance, it's about availability.Zenith wrote:Why exactly do you want PCIe for graphic cards? Future compatability? By the time AGP 8x has reached its limit of usefulness (Which I don't recall seeing it lagging behind PCIe with identical cores), and PCIe will be necessary, you'll be looking at DDR2 different socketed athlon64 cores, I'd bet.
UberGerbil wrote:Yes, but by this time next year you won't be able to find a "latest tech" top-end graphics card in anything other than PCI-E. If you plan on keeping your mobo for more than 2 years, and you expect to buy another top of the line graphics card in that timeframe, you want to get PCI-E. You'll be able to find mid-range cards, even using the latest chips, but the top end is going PCI-E only, very quickly. It's not about performance, it's about availability.Zenith wrote:Why exactly do you want PCIe for graphic cards? Future compatability? By the time AGP 8x has reached its limit of usefulness (Which I don't recall seeing it lagging behind PCIe with identical cores), and PCIe will be necessary, you'll be looking at DDR2 different socketed athlon64 cores, I'd bet.
Unfortunately, I wouldn't expect to see an AMD SFF with PCI-E actually available for sale before the end of the year.
sroylance wrote:Is there an AMD64 SFF with PCI-express? If not, is there one coming before the end of the year?
It seems all the GPU's I'd really like are all in PCI-express for now (6600GT, X700)
I agree that business decisions generally trump technical decisions, and AGP bandwidth is more than adequate for now and the near future. But the class of customer who pays $400+ for a top-end video card is rapidly moving to PCI-E -- because it's the latest thing, because they're buying motherboards that are PCI-E only, or because they're the kind of people who will pay top dollar for any ounce of performance and they think PCI-E is better. OEMs (see Dell, in particular) are quickly going PIC-E-only also, because the latest chipsets from Intel use it (and the latest AMD-oriented chipsets soon will). nVidia especially wants you to move away from AGP because that gives them a chance to sell you at least one new video card per computer and maybe two. Vendors and distributors hate dealing with multiple permutations of product; maintaing both AGP and PCI-E means multiplying SKUs by two. That's an expense they want to avoid, so they have a strong incentive to move to exclusively PCI-E as soon as possible. And finally, the PCI-E spec supports up to 75W per slot (there's even a revised version of the spec under review that will allow 150w) which the graphics cards need; you wouldn't think it would matter, but not having to put a separate power connector on each card saves them money.random gerbil wrote:I dont think that is true. Why would nVidia or ATI eliminate a HUGE part of the high end market and sell only PCIe? AGP itself is more than capable of providing any necessary bandwidth for a long time to come. The jump from 4x agp to 8x agp even produced marginal if any performance increases, despite doubling bandwidth. I think it would be a mistake to cut out AGP at the top end in a year. What drives these companies are the bottom lines, and excluding AGP customers will impact their bottom lines.
UberGerbil wrote:And finally, the PCI-E spec supports up to 75W per slot (there's even a revised version of the spec under review that will allow 150w) which the graphics cards need; you wouldn't think it would matter, but not having to put a separate power connector on each card saves them money.
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