So you bought a card 4 months ago, you're happy with it, and it has been performing in line with your expectations, but suddenly now it isn't?
this...
and this is over a .5 discrepancy? maybe?
GAF you lookin' real bitchy right now.
So you bought a card 4 months ago, you're happy with it, and it has been performing in line with your expectations, but suddenly now it isn't?
So you bought a card 4 months ago, you're happy with it, and it has been performing in line with your expectations, but suddenly now it isn't?
this...
and this is over a .5 discrepancy? maybe?
GAF you lookin' real bitchy right now.
So you bought a card 4 months ago, you're happy with it, and it has been performing in line with your expectations, but suddenly now it isn't?
Some quality corporate ball licking you've got going there.
I wonder what would have been the reaction of the same people if it had been AMD that had boondoggled their consumers.
I'd be interested in seeing an option to turn off the last 1/2 gig in the driver. But I guess it'd just swap to system ram at that point and be slower anyways.
Anandtech said:This in turn is why the 224GB/sec memory bandwidth number for the GTX 970 is technically correct and yet still not entirely useful as we move past the memory controllers, as it is not possible to actually get that much bandwidth at once on the read side. GTX 970 can read the 3.5GB segment at 196GB/sec (7GHz * 7 ports * 32-bits), or it can read the 512MB segment at 28GB/sec, but not both at once; it is a true XOR situation. Furthermore because the 512MB segment cannot be read at the same time as the 3.5GB segment, reading this segment blocks accessing the 3.5GB segment for that cycle, further reducing the effective memory bandwidth of the card. The larger the percentage of the time the crossbar is reading the 512MB segment, the lower the effective memory bandwidth from the 3.5GB segment.
No.So you bought a card 4 months ago, you're happy with it, and it has been performing in line with your expectations, but suddenly now it isn't?
This isn't about .5 GBs. Why is this hard to understand?this...
and this is over a .5 discrepancy? maybe?
GAF you lookin' real bitchy right now.
I wonder what would have been the reaction of some people if it had been AMD that had boondoggled their consumers.
I'm not so sure about that:
If I understand it correctly: Any time the card is accessing the 0.5GB part it will completely halt access to the other 3.5GB, so it gimps the overall bandwidth significantly. So I don't think it's clear cut that having the 0.5GB partition accessible is always better than reading it from system RAM instead. I'd guess it depends on the particular application/game.
Nothing has been confirmed that they are even on the way.When are the 8GB cards coming out anyway?
So you bought a card 4 months ago, you're happy with it, and it has been performing in line with your expectations, but suddenly now it isn't?
You don't.
Even the .5gb, that is much slower than the 3.5gb, partition is significantly faster than system ram access and will always be so. If the entire card were equipped with only this slow vram it would still be significantly faster than accessing system ram.
NVIDIA CAO David M. Shannon dumps nearly $0.5 million in stock 3 days ago.
Coincidence?
http://www.wkrb13.com/markets/468447/nvidia-cao-david-m-shannon-sells-21400-shares-nvda/
You don't.
Even the .5gb, that is much slower than the 3.5gb, partition is significantly faster than system ram access and will always be so. If the entire card were equipped with only this slow vram it would still be significantly faster than accessing system ram.
I understand people's frustration with this and can completely sympathize with it. Heck, I'm extremely disappointed as well that my card cannot access the full 4GB vram that the 980 can at all times but can we please stop saying that this gimps the 970 and makes it a underpowered card?
The 970 is still the same card that every single reviewer praised non stop about. Its still extremely wallet friendly and performs brilliantly even when compared to a 980. Despite this issue coming to light, I dont feel that the extra 200$ for the 980 is justified at all for the performance gain that it'll bring.
I also dont understand some of the posts saying that the 970 isn't that great for 4k anymore. From what I understood when I bought it, the card was never supposed to be great at that resolution (even the 980 in SLI wont give you 60+ FPS in every game @4k without sacrificing effects and thats a 1000$+ setup). At 1080p, a 970 will keep on performing great today and for the foreseeable future so can we please stop saying that this doesn't hold true anymore?
Oh and the people saying they wont buy the 970. What will you guys buy in this price range now that we have this information? The R9 290x? If yes, then that card's 8GB version doesn't perform any better than a GTX 970.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/sapphire-vapor-x-r9-290x-8gb,3977-3.html
By the time that 8GB of VRAM is required for any game, a 970 and 290x will not be powerful enough to max out every game at 1080p anyway.
I was inspired today.
I understand people's frustration with this and can completely sympathize with it. Heck, I'm extremely disappointed as well that my card cannot access the full 4GB vram that the 980 can at all times but can we please stop saying that this gimps the 970 and makes it a underpowered card?
The 970 is still the same card that every single reviewer praised non stop about. Its still extremely wallet friendly and performs brilliantly even when compared to a 980. Despite this issue coming to light, I dont feel that the extra 200$ for the 980 is justified at all for the performance gain that it'll bring.
I also dont understand some of the posts saying that the 970 isn't that great for 4k anymore. From what I understood when I bought it, the card was never supposed to be great at that resolution (even the 980 in SLI wont give you 60+ FPS in every game @4k without sacrificing effects and thats a 1000$+ setup). At 1080p, a 970 will keep on performing great today and for the foreseeable future so can we please stop saying that this doesn't hold true anymore?
Oh and the people saying they wont buy the 970. What will you guys buy in this price range now that we have this information? The R9 290x? If yes, then that card's 8GB version doesn't perform any better than a GTX 970.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/sapphire-vapor-x-r9-290x-8gb,3977-3.html
By the time that 8GB of VRAM is required for any game, a 970 and 290x will not be powerful enough to max out every game at 1080p anyway.
I'm pretty sure it is. This is not going to cause Nvidia any major problems at all. The most they will do is offer people free games (which will satisfy the majority of the people) or some sort of a step up program to get a GTX 980. If the RROD fiasco didn't cause microsoft to go under I dont see how a problem with a single GPU can result in Nvidia's CAO fearing for the company's financial state.
I didn't buy a 970 just for today's games, I also bought it for TOMORROW'S. This isn't hard.
The 290x Seems to trade pretty well at 1440p + resolutions vs the 970, is cheaper but is louder and greater power draw, but then it also has all of it's 4 gigs, which might explain why it does better at the higher resolutions http://www.anandtech.com/bench/product/1059?vs=1355
Im now looking at a 290x or 290.
I didn't buy a 970 just for today's games, I also bought it for TOMORROW'S. This isn't hard.
It really depends how bad it gets, how nVidia continues to respond and the markets assessment and reaction to it.
Remember. IBM once had a relatively healthy hard drive division and one product with a high failure rate essentially put it under and they sold up to Hitachi. Just saying...
It doesn't really matter why anyone bought the card.
It was advertised as something that it isn't & that's not OK. There's no legitimate way to turn the blame onto the consumer here.
NVIDIA misled about exactly what this card is & they should definitely have to compensate people who bought them on the promise that wasn't delivered.
I've got 2x970s in SLI and I really hope I can upgrade them to 980s for a reduced price, get a partial refund or similar.
I fully expect we'll just get a gratis game or something, but it's not REALLY good enough.
I'm not so sure about that:
Originally Posted by Anandtech
This in turn is why the 224GB/sec memory bandwidth number for the GTX 970 is technically correct and yet still not entirely useful as we move past the memory controllers, as it is not possible to actually get that much bandwidth at once on the read side. GTX 970 can read the 3.5GB segment at 196GB/sec (7GHz * 7 ports * 32-bits), or it can read the 512MB segment at 28GB/sec, but not both at once; it is a true XOR situation. Furthermore because the 512MB segment cannot be read at the same time as the 3.5GB segment, reading this segment blocks accessing the 3.5GB segment for that cycle, further reducing the effective memory bandwidth of the card. The larger the percentage of the time the crossbar is reading the 512MB segment, the lower the effective memory bandwidth from the 3.5GB segment.
If I understand it correctly: Any time the card is accessing the 0.5GB part it will completely halt access to the other 3.5GB, so it gimps the overall bandwidth significantly. I don't think it's clear cut that having the 0.5GB partition accessible is always better than having that data in system RAM instead. I'd guess it depends on the particular application/game.
I'd imagine having full speed access to 3.5GB + slow access from system RAM combined is faster than ONLY having access to the slow 0.5GB VRAM and nothing else in a given read cycle.
Can someone more tech-savvy on this comment on this?
It really depends how bad it gets, how nVidia continues to respond and the markets assessment and reaction to it.
Remember. IBM once had a relatively healthy hard drive division and one product with a high failure rate essentially put it under and they sold up to Hitachi. Just saying...
So what it appears to me is they're saying the memory speed calculation is bogus. At least for read speed. It might be correct for writing speed.
You can't get 196GB/s and add the other 28GB/s and get 224GB/s. (The picture they show, has an 8th memory controller for that last 0.5GB. And you're right about having exclusive read access.) However, AnandTech goes on to say NVidia prioritizes what things they will need most often in the 3.5GB partition, and use some secret sauce in their driver to figure out what is most used and least used.
All in all it's giant mess.
I'd still prefer a driver option to report that there is only 3.5GB available that way when polled about how much a developer can use, they'll only see the fast 3.5GB.
(Sidenote: That's what Microsoft tried to claim with the Xbox One edram and the ddr3 ram.)
At 1440p
Metro LL = Same
COH2 = 290x
Bioshock Infinite = 970
Battlefield 4 = Same
Crysis 3 = Same
Warhead = 290x
Total War Rome = 970 (but almost same)
Thief = Same
Grid 2 = 970 (but almost same)
290x = 1 clear win
970 = 1 clear and 2 barely wins
Everything else is same between the cards. If you take into account the latest MFAA tech that Nvidia added to almost every DX10 and 11 game in the last driver update, you get a further 10-15% FPS boost in all games with the same IQ.
Yes, I didn't either. This however does not significantly change how tomorrow's games will perform on this card. There is a change yes, maybe 5-10%, but that isn't something which Nvidia cant work around with better drivers and performance.
Apples and oranges, not comparable at all.
I agree with this. Its pathetic of Nvidia to lie to its customers when they could have been upfront about this whole situation. Expecting compensation is completely fine and there is nothing wrong with that.
That I am aware of. Yes it is still 4x faster than system ram over PCI-Express.
But the article says the card can never access both the 0.5gb and the 3.5gb at the same time. So if in a given scenario the game engine needs to access assets that are located in both the 3.5gb part and the 0.5gb part, it will have to do one at a time.
My question is: Can the card access its 3.5gb part and system ram in the same read cycle? If yes, then can't there be a scenarios where it would be advantageous to have continuous access to the full bandwidth of the 3.5gb while occasionally dipping into system ram for lower priority stuff, instead of completely stopping any transfer from the 3.5gb every time it needs to make a call to the 0.5gb part?
I'm not a hardware expert and I haven't crunched the numbers to see how the math turns out in both cases. I'd like to see it though.
Of course it all falls apart if the answer to my bolded question is No.
So why don't nvidia use 20GB/s VRAM on GPUs? Why is 3.5Gb of the VRAM specced to 150GB/s? Sounds like nvidia are wasting money? /sarcasm
Even if it's faster than system ram it's irrelevant since it's GDDR5, we expect the specified 224GB/s bandwidth.
And since when do we ever want to use system ram as VRAM? The point is it's only slightly quicker than system ram, that's the whole point of having GDDR5, for much much faster speeds...
If I understand it correctly: Any time the card is accessing the 0.5GB part it will completely halt access to the other 3.5GB, so it gimps the overall bandwidth significantly. So I don't think it's clear cut that having the 0.5GB partition accessible is always better than reading it from system RAM instead. I'd guess it depends on the particular application/game.
The card would literally have to be using only the .5gb partition for seconds at a time before system ram would be more beneficial, and since ram cycles are done in nanoseconds there would never be a case where system memory was the better solution.
Reading is fundamental.
The post i replied to said:
And I replied that that it is clear cut that the .5gb partition is always better than system ram...that's it. No one said anything about wanting to use system ram, or that video card manufactures didn't need ram as fast as they use, or whatever else you pulled out of your ass to argue against.
Sorry I missed that post!
I didn't buy a 970 just for today's games, I also bought it for TOMORROW'S. This isn't hard.
This is great hahaI was inspired today.
I like how one 290x win disappears in your final tabulation, you also miss the two bear wins at 1440p are reversed at 4k, again indicating that the 290x actual 4gigs does start making a difference. Price is still cheaper amd have not lied to me or reviewers so i'm going red this time round.
Called Gigabyte support and they were very helpful. They basically can't do anything yet as they have to wait from word from Nvidia but the gentlemen that I spoke to both were helpful and one of them even took my contact information as if there is a major update on this I will probably be receiving a call.
I kind of just want to get ahead of the game because I want the performance that was advertised and I know it might not seem like a lot but when you talk about somebody who plays at high resolutions and high refresh rates and then you have other stuff along the way like virtual reality headsets coming, then you would understand why I still want to continue to support these companies but what's right is right. I don't even mind sending the card back so long as I can get a better card because to me this is not really something I would want to live with. I'm trying not to sound hyperbolic but it is what it is and as a consumer and enthusiast builder I cannot be any nicer about this issue. I want all the performance that I paid for is all.
BhahahaI was inspired today.
Yes, they are aware. At least Gigabyte is. I basically told the representatives to please pass the word along which they said they always do. So if Nvidia is aware of it to an extent then you can bet that they are definitely hearing from the vendors as well.Did they know about it?
Did they know about it?
$432.
Really? I missed that by mistake. Not like I didn't mention the win a couple of lines above. I wasn't comparing the performance at 4k. These cards are not meant to be used at 4k resolution. Unless someone has a 4K gsync monitor, those frame rates will result in terrible gameplay.
You're complaining about that? Us Aussies pay $500 for 970 AIB cards, and that's without the recent price hike.
The way I read what they said is that they use the .5GB as a third pool of memory that is faster then the main system memory, but much slower then the main 3.5GB pool of vram.