TomCo wrote: Personally, I’m worried about DX10 and Vista. I've heard a lot of rumours and I’m reconsidering my build in May. Is it true that DX10 has no legacy support and will only work with vista? Will I be able to play my old Dx9 and below games? Worst of all will my expensive new DX9 graphics card be useless when DX10 comes out leaving me €400 out of pocket and having to but a new card? All these new developments are pissing me off, I've been dreaming about a new Pc for a year now and I feel its being snatched away from me.
Faceless Man wrote: The Havok/nVidia solution is different in that it will use one graphics card in a SLi setup for the physics work. The Aegia solution is of course a seperate card.
conzymaher wrote: The PS3 has a Ageia PPU
Azza wrote: Is this eventually going be an important compontet of PC's or is its use limited to games?
gline wrote: the havok/nvidia offering seems interesting as no new hardware would need to be purchased if you own an sli setup. I wonder how badly hit the graphics would be with it? I suppose the game would just run with one gfx active and the 2nd gfx acting as the ppu??? yeh?
conzymaher wrote: Did anyone see the DX10 Farcry Demo??? WOW:eek:
Azza wrote: More on ATI's physics system.http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=1414
conzymaher wrote: The Ageia Physx PPU is available to DELL, Alienware, Voodoo PC....... as we speak, and will be launched in May to consumers:)
The XPS 600 Renegade comes in a custom-painted case inside which sit four GeForce 7900 GPUs each with 512MB of video memory ready to run games at 2,560 x 1,600. The unit also features an Ageia PhysX processor on which games can offload all their complex physics calculations to free up the CPU - a dual-core Pentium D Extreme Edition "factory overclocked" to 4.26GHz