NeoToPower
1st Folding then Sex
NightShade, ñ sei se reparaste mas no inicio da thread estão imgs da gf6800.
I've been testing with an Antec True430 and haven't run across any problems so far.
This model has five peripheral power connectors that connect to devices like a HDD or CD/DVD. Two of the power supply leads have one connector on each lead. Neither one of them is shared with any other device, which is very important, and are connected directly to the NV40.
A second lead has two connectors, both of which are connected to hard drives.
The dilemma I faced was that the third lead only had one connector and I needed to get power to two DVD's. A power 'Y' splitter cable solved that problem.
The only case fan I have is powered by the motherboard, which is an nForce3 150 running an Athlon 64 3400+. I use the on-board LAN, but have a Sound Blaster Audigy2 ZS add-in sound card.
NVIDIA recommends the Antec True550, Antec True480 or NEO480, or Enermax EG475P-VE SFMA. I went ahead and ordered a True550 from Newegg the other day just in case.
Nemesis11 disse:NVIDIA recommends the Antec True550, Antec True480 or NEO480, or Enermax EG475P-VE SFMA.[/url]
Gandalf disse:Pois .. esses 400 nem sao nada doutro muindo .. e claro que chegam ca com uns 200 a mais.
ATI Radeon R420 Roadmap:
Secret double agents in Zimbabwe have turned over classified ATI documents. The below specifications outline a whole host of information about the upcoming flagship VPU from ATI.
First we have the names that will be attached to the VPUs that will scale across three levels of performance with the same VPU. The "X800XT" and the "X880XT" being the "same" card but with a different interface, with the latter being a PCI-Express X16 card. You will see that the PCI-Express core is labeled "R423" as it is in fact a native PCI-Express part and not the same CPU as the R420 with an adaptive bridge to allow the VPU to work on both interfaces. (It is yet to be seen if there is a performance impact from using a bridged VPU/GPU.) Notice as the clocks and memory speeds scale across the product line, so does the pixel pipelines that are turned on or off to further define performance levels.
Last but certainly not least are the projected release dates and MSRP prices in US dollars.
This information did not come from ATI but a source that has proven to be correct in the past. I would categorize this information as "solid but unconfirmed".