Pige, I'm with you all the way on this. I've been watching this G400 Max
situation for several months now. I've long been a Matrox 2D fan, and it
looked like the G400M finally was going to put them on the map with 3D.
Alas, it looks again to be too little, too late. When I read the info about
TurboGL I instantly canceled my order.
And before I hear lots of justifications that the G400M is some kind of
great card for gaming, let me say that: the TurboGL is still Beta (and the Max was
supposed to ship in when, June??); so even this support is in the "not ready
for primetime" file. Second it hasn't even been tested against Athlons, so
we've got no idea what code tweaks may be necessary to support AMD.
Third... if they want to get _today's_ gaming market, they've got to support
the Celeron (yah, yah, it's going to get SSE too, I know... but file that in
the "not yet" category). And, short of superhigh resolutions, other cards
exist (e.g - Guillemot's Xentor32) that match or exceed the G400M's
capabilities across the board (for a lower price, no less).
Ultimately, I see no compelling reason to buy the G400M over certain other
cards and I'm ultimately unimpressed by their use of SSE... if the history
of the G200 and G400 family is any indication, something bigger and better
will be reality by the time the G400M is *really* ready for the market.
Sorry, but it looks like my old Matrox M2 is the last Matrox card that I'm
going to own. The G400M might have plenty of reasons to recommend it, but not if you're a gamer.
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[This message has been edited by o-o-o- (edited 09-30-1999).]
situation for several months now. I've long been a Matrox 2D fan, and it
looked like the G400M finally was going to put them on the map with 3D.
Alas, it looks again to be too little, too late. When I read the info about
TurboGL I instantly canceled my order.
And before I hear lots of justifications that the G400M is some kind of
great card for gaming, let me say that: the TurboGL is still Beta (and the Max was
supposed to ship in when, June??); so even this support is in the "not ready
for primetime" file. Second it hasn't even been tested against Athlons, so
we've got no idea what code tweaks may be necessary to support AMD.
Third... if they want to get _today's_ gaming market, they've got to support
the Celeron (yah, yah, it's going to get SSE too, I know... but file that in
the "not yet" category). And, short of superhigh resolutions, other cards
exist (e.g - Guillemot's Xentor32) that match or exceed the G400M's
capabilities across the board (for a lower price, no less).
Ultimately, I see no compelling reason to buy the G400M over certain other
cards and I'm ultimately unimpressed by their use of SSE... if the history
of the G200 and G400 family is any indication, something bigger and better
will be reality by the time the G400M is *really* ready for the market.
Sorry, but it looks like my old Matrox M2 is the last Matrox card that I'm
going to own. The G400M might have plenty of reasons to recommend it, but not if you're a gamer.
------------------
[This message has been edited by o-o-o- (edited 09-30-1999).]
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