There is lots of speculation concerning the next Nvidia chips (NV30) saying that this should be the version which includes 3dFX hardware enhancements.
While it is true that the GeForce lineup are basically reworks of the first GeForce chip, on smaller processes and with the a few enhancements along the line to follow DirectX.
This next one HAS been touted as being totally different.
A multi chip solution has been earmarked before (by 3dFx) and they were on to something they believed to be powerful (Rampage and Sage).
Are mulit chip solutions the only way forward?
Just remember that the fastest and easiest way to solve a problem is to Divide and Conquer.
Split the problem up into smaller, easier to handle problems.
Hence the multichip: One controller, multiple gpu's.
The memory interface is hectic, and the texture memory is bad at the best. Do you have large memory with a copy of texture for each chip (in their own memory) or do you use a UMA style architechture, where the memory on the board is shared by all the chips (i suspect a V large bandwidth needed for say, 4 chips sharing the same memory...4x what one chip would need?)
Multi chip is the way to go.
what do others think?
While it is true that the GeForce lineup are basically reworks of the first GeForce chip, on smaller processes and with the a few enhancements along the line to follow DirectX.
This next one HAS been touted as being totally different.
A multi chip solution has been earmarked before (by 3dFx) and they were on to something they believed to be powerful (Rampage and Sage).
Are mulit chip solutions the only way forward?
Just remember that the fastest and easiest way to solve a problem is to Divide and Conquer.
Split the problem up into smaller, easier to handle problems.
Hence the multichip: One controller, multiple gpu's.
The memory interface is hectic, and the texture memory is bad at the best. Do you have large memory with a copy of texture for each chip (in their own memory) or do you use a UMA style architechture, where the memory on the board is shared by all the chips (i suspect a V large bandwidth needed for say, 4 chips sharing the same memory...4x what one chip would need?)
Multi chip is the way to go.
what do others think?
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