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Hardware | Posted by Max at Jul. 17, 2008 - 10:30 pm


When AMD began talking about no longer building high end hardware using single monolithic GPUs a few weeks back, we let them know that improving CrossFire support would be incredibly important going forward. AMD told us that they are putting a lot into that but also that they have some exciting technology up their sleeves with R700 to help out as well. Unfortunately, we haven't gotten as much detailed information on how it works, but the new technology is GPU to GPU communication.

Until now, CrossFire has done zero GPU to GPU or framebuffer to framebuffer communication. As with the first iteration, each card fully renders the parts of the screen for which it is responsible (be it a whole frame in AFR, the top or bottom half of a screen, or alternating tiles). These results are sent to a combiner where the digital signals are merged and output to the screen. This is the only communication that takes place in CrossFire at the moment. R700 will change that by allowing GPUs to communicate.


Eff why eye, the card's got two gigs of RAM. Which means that 1GB 4870s had better be around the corner. All these hardware releases sure are making the 4850 seem like a really great buy. And I hope that this direct GPU-to-GPU connection makes a larger real-world difference, driver tweakage pending. Also, why are there still no custom templates for CrossFire? Jeez, you've got working drivers, and a perfectly good NVIDIA control panel to copy, ATI. Hop to it.

Stream of conscious commentary ending in three, two... My cores can beat up your cores.
[Read Full Story at Anandtech]
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