Daqui a pouco o pessoal da AMD ouve o Sonas e voltam com aquelas maluqueiras estilo 4870x2, 5970 e 7990 hahaha.
Daqui a pouco o pessoal da AMD ouve o Sonas e voltam com aquelas maluqueiras estilo 4870x2, 5970 e 7990 hahaha.
Última edição de SleepyFilipy : 23-09-19 às 12:39
Dell G15
Enquanto não houver algo TOP não volto à AMD eheheheh
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AMD "Raise the Game" Bundle Makes a ComebackAMD announced the 2019 edition of its "Raise the Game" game-bundle offer that goes with purchase of its Ryzen desktop processors and Radeon RX graphics cards. The bundle extends the 3-month Xbox Game Pass to a much larger part of AMD's product lineup, and not just the Radeon RX 5700-series. The bundle introduces three new AAA games to the mix - Tom Clancy's "Ghost Recon: Breakpoint," "The Outer Worlds," and "Borderlands 3," including AMD-exclusive in-game content. Depending on what AMD product you buy, you either get both games, or get to choose between the two. The 3-month Xbox Game Pass stays included.
AMD's flagship Ryzen 9 series and Ryzen 7 3800X includes both games - "The Outer Worlds" and "Borderlands 3," - and the 3-month Xbox Game Pass. The Ryzen 7 3700X, 3600X, 2700X, and 2700 include one of the two games - "The Outer Worlds" or "Borderlands 3," and the 3-month Xbox Game Pass. The Ryzen 5 3600, 3400G, and Ryzen 5 2000-series include just the 3-month Xbox Game Pass. Over in the GPU front, buyers of Radeon RX 5700-series, RX 590, RX 580, and RX 570, get to choose one of the two games - Tom Clancy's "Ghost Recon: Breakpoint" or "Borderlands 3," and also receive the 3-month Xbox Game Pass. The Radeon VII, Radeon RX Vega series, and Radeon RX 560 stocks include 3-month Xbox Game Pass. You also get to choose either of the two games when you buy a qualifying pre-built desktop or notebook powered by AMD Ryzen or Radeon products.
Flashing a Radeon RX 5700 to 5700 XT: Free 10% Performance Boost
Já fazia muito tempo que nao víamos um mod deste nas gráficas.
Andava desconfiado dessa possibilidade desde que o Steve disse que a própria AMD lhe tinha confirmado que as 5700 eram "trancadas" somente por uma questão de segmentação de mercado. Pelos vistos é bem verdade. Muito interessante, eram as 290 que podiam virar 290X da última vez? Já foi há um tempo, não me recordo muito bem.
Agora é que as 5700 ainda vão vender mais xD
Dell G15
My Specs: .....
CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D :-: Board: MSI B550M BAZOOKA :-: RAM: 64 GB DDR4 Kingston Fury Renegade 3600 Mhz CL16 :-: Storage: Kingston NV2 NVMe 2 TB + Kingston NV2 NVMe 1 TB
CPU Cooling Solution: ThermalRight Frost Commander 140 Black + ThermalRight TL-C12B-S 12CM PWM + ThermalRight TL-C14C-S 14CM PWM :-: PSU: Corsair HX 1200 WATTS
Case: NZXT H6 FLOW :-: Internal Cooling: 4x ThermalRight TL-C12B-S 12CM PWM + 4x ThermalRight TL-C14C-S 14CM PWM
GPU: ASUS TUF AMD RADEON RX 7900 XTX - 24 GB :-: Monitor: BenQ EW3270U 4K HDR
28% a mais de consumo... com a bios da Thicc II Ultra, uma VGA que é uma valente nhaca... Se a XFX tiver feito aquela BIOS como fez o cooler da VGA por exemplo, qualquer outra BIOS deverá ser melhor lol.
Seria interessante ver este teste feito numa 5700 Red Dragon, com a bios da XT Red Devil por exemplo.
Dell G15
Mesmo assim, 10W em cima da 2070 Super, apenas perdendo 7% overall.
Performance grátis, é performance grátisse...se eu posso pagar 360€ por uma 5700 e obter o mesmo desempenho da XT, porque não?
Só é pena é a 5700 não custar 230€ como aconteceu com a 5850, que se flashava para a 5870 que custava 350...
Boas!
Na verdade eram esses os preços delas... O mercado é que distorceu tudo...
São placas de gama média, e estás a pagar quase preços High End...
Com isto dito, se apanhar uma Sapphire Pulse 5700, ainda a compro e flasho-a para a Nitro + 5700 XT (se der... mas penso que dê).
Cumprimentos,
LPC
My Specs: .....
CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D :-: Board: MSI B550M BAZOOKA :-: RAM: 64 GB DDR4 Kingston Fury Renegade 3600 Mhz CL16 :-: Storage: Kingston NV2 NVMe 2 TB + Kingston NV2 NVMe 1 TB
CPU Cooling Solution: ThermalRight Frost Commander 140 Black + ThermalRight TL-C12B-S 12CM PWM + ThermalRight TL-C14C-S 14CM PWM :-: PSU: Corsair HX 1200 WATTS
Case: NZXT H6 FLOW :-: Internal Cooling: 4x ThermalRight TL-C12B-S 12CM PWM + 4x ThermalRight TL-C14C-S 14CM PWM
GPU: ASUS TUF AMD RADEON RX 7900 XTX - 24 GB :-: Monitor: BenQ EW3270U 4K HDR
A mais cara e a pior. Asus tax FTW!
Pior que a Thicc? Credo...
Enviado de meu Redmi Note 5 usando o Tapatalk
Dell G15
Ainda bem que há profissionais a fazer análises sérias e independentes.
Rumor: AMD to unveil next-gen RDNA 2 GPU with ray tracing support at CES 2020
É apenas um rumor, mas cá fica.
BTW, a CES 2020 é em 7 a 10 de Janeiro.
https://www.guru3d.com/articles-page...-review,1.html
Nada mau pelo custo. 5500XT 8GB taco a taco com a 1660 e 5500XT 4GB>1650 Super.
Ray Tracing and Variable-Rate Shading Design Goals for AMD RDNA2Hardware-accelerated ray tracing and variable-rate shading will be the design focal points for AMD's next-generation RDNA2 graphics architecture. Microsoft's reveal of its Xbox Series X console attributed both features to AMD's "next generation RDNA" architecture (which logically happens to be RDNA2). The Xbox Series X uses a semi-custom SoC that features CPU cores based on the "Zen 2" microarchitecture and a GPU based on RDNA2. It's highly likely that the SoC could be fabricated on TSMC's 7 nm EUV node, as the RDNA2 graphics architecture is optimized for that. This would mean an optical shrink of "Zen 2" to 7 nm EUV. Besides the SoC that powers Xbox Series X, AMD is expected to leverage 7 nm EUV for its RDNA2 discrete GPUs and CPU chiplets based on its "Zen 3" microarchitecture in 2020.
Variable-rate shading (VRS) is an API-level feature that lets GPUs conserve resources by shading certain areas of a scene at a lower rate than the other, without perceptible difference to the viewer. Microsoft developed two tiers of VRS for its DirectX 12 API, tier-1 is currently supported by NVIDIA "Turing" and Intel Gen11 architectures, while tier-2 is supported by "Turing." The current RDNA architecture doesn't support either tiers. Hardware-accelerated ray-tracing is the cornerstone of NVIDIA's "Turing" RTX 20-series graphics cards, and AMD is catching up to it. Microsoft already standardized it on the software-side with the DXR (DirectX Raytracing) API. A combination of VRS and dynamic render-resolution will be crucial for next-gen consoles to achieve playability at 4K, and to even boast of being 8K-capable.
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