intelfanboy88
New Member
Anyone know when the inflated price of the 8800 gt will go down to or below MSRP? Are there any timetables or any estimates?
Anyone know when the inflated price of the 8800 gt will go down to or below MSRP? Are there any timetables or any estimates?
Availability: Out of stock: 5 days after order placed
That doesn't sound real at all, unless they change it every day.How would you guys take this? Back in stock in 5 days?
That doesn't sound real at all, unless they change it every day.
Availability: Out of stock: 5 days after order placed
it should drop once the new 8800GTS come out.
Hermes, you know when the G92 GTS is released will that be better than the current GTX and will it be like a domino effect; e.g. i mean will they release a new 8800GTX and then a new Ultra etc.
Cheers, just curious
salman
Nothing would make me angrier than that... If you ask me, they should have built the G92 before the crap that I bought, that was just an easy way to get something on the market for Nvidia...
If the new GTS is in fact better than the GT, there's a likely chance it will outperform the GTX. It makes no sense to release the GTS and have it perform on par with the GT, common sense says it will be better. The price tag will obviously be higher, $100-150 or so...
Lol, yeah, confusion. Those Nvidiots should've named them differently, hell should've made them mid level 9000 cards, even. Better than this.
No they shouldn't have named, they should've built the things right in the first place... You tell me why, over a course of maybe a year, that they couldn't have devoted more effort into finding G92 technology earlier.... Ugh, this is aggravating... I might swap for 8800GT and get another for SLI...
NVIDIA's GeForce 8800 GT might be remembered as one of the most successful NVIDIA graphics cards of our time, at least according to the flurry of reviews this week. Virtually every top tier e-tailer managed to sell out of the card in less than two days.
Yet NVIDIA isn't done yet. A G92-derivative will appear later this year with even more shader units. According to company guidance, the new G92 will launch in early December and feature 128 shader units as opposed to the 112 featured on GeForce 8800 GT.
This would be mean the additional 16 shader units exist on all GeForce 8800 GT cards, but are disabled for yield or marketing purposes. In addition to the extra shaders, the new G92 will also feature higher core frequencies and support for up to 1GB GDDR3.
The new 65nm G92 has a tentative SKU designation of GeForce 8800 GTS. This might sound confusing as NVIDIA already sports a GeForce 8800 GTS card based on the 90nm G80 silicon. However, since G92 sports a 256-bit memory interface, the new 8800 GTS cards will feature traditional memory blocks of 512MB or 1024MB. The older, G80-based GeForce 8800 GTS features 320-bit memory blocks of 320MB or 640MB.
As the new GeForce 8800 GT generally outpaces the existing GeForce 8800 GTS, the new GeForce 8800 GTS will likely surpass NVIDIA's high-end GeForce 8800 GTX and potentially GeForce 8800 Ultra.