Has the time finally come for multi-GPU solutions? nVidia stakes its claim again with the GTX460 – although the lack of true scalability (to 3 or 4-way SLi) tells us something very important about this market.
At the end of this special article is a single graph that will tell you all you need to know, but we'd recommend you spend a couple of minutes going through the KitGuru logic first – it's useful background that all you Gurus out there should really want to know.
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While Zardon populates his results spreadsheet the way rabbits populate the fields around Watership Down, we've decided to take a much more relaxed and informal approach to testing the way this new solution from nVidia will scale with time. We're checking for one thing only. Does GTX460 present you with an intelligent way to choose Fermi now and in the future?
KitGuru loves the whole SLi/CrossFire uber-hype. The hype as opposed to the actual technology.
The technology is fine, but a poor second to the energy used in engineering these solutions or the money that customers spend in creating willy-waving systems from the resulting cards.
That’s how we used to see it, but is that view too simplistic? Has the market and technology evolved into a more useful state?
Also, will the future of multi-GPU solutions be the same for both nVidia and AMD – or Intel for that matter?
SLi seems to scale well indeed and I see no need for SLix3 either.
Yeah SLI x3 or higher was always an epenis thing, the drivers never really scaled well in the past either. SLIx2 seems the way to go.
Cant see anyone ever needing SLI for these, unless they move to a 30 inch screen.
Well it seems scaling is good, look forward to seeing a full SLI review on the site soon.
SCaling is normally good with SLI and these cards, glad to see it seems to be solid performer in dual card mode. more tests coming?
so… who won the thermaltake cooler?? (page6)
@flo – I use a 55 inch screen so yum yum to SLI for these for me!