The R300 supports the full DX9 feature set in hardware.
That includes displacement mapping.
Maybe they have to license it from M, but it's there.
As for the car comparison, that is quite misleading, because different engines are tuned for different revs, and running one at the revs of another is in no way equivalent to a clock speed comparison.
Clock speed is simply cycles per second.
Processor architecture is not optimized for a clock speed. The processor itself will scale perfectly linearly with clock speed.
And for many comparisons clock speed is over-rated (because the Athlon has a better set of execution units than the p4). But in this case the architectures are fairly similar in terms of peak potential performance, so there is something to be said for clock.
Anyway, isn't it interesting how big of a jump this is over the competition, compared to previous releases? The last time we had a jump like this was just after Matrox released their last core....
That includes displacement mapping.
Maybe they have to license it from M, but it's there.
As for the car comparison, that is quite misleading, because different engines are tuned for different revs, and running one at the revs of another is in no way equivalent to a clock speed comparison.
Clock speed is simply cycles per second.
Processor architecture is not optimized for a clock speed. The processor itself will scale perfectly linearly with clock speed.
And for many comparisons clock speed is over-rated (because the Athlon has a better set of execution units than the p4). But in this case the architectures are fairly similar in terms of peak potential performance, so there is something to be said for clock.
Anyway, isn't it interesting how big of a jump this is over the competition, compared to previous releases? The last time we had a jump like this was just after Matrox released their last core....
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