December 13th, 2007

NVIDIA has extended its SLI technology, allowing up to three GeForce graphics cards to be used in one machine - delivering up to 2.8 times the performance of a single GPU system.
If you’ve ever wanted to run Crysis at 2560×1600 with 8x AA and all the DirectX 10 effects enabled, this is the way to do it - although it’ll cost you a pretty penny. You’ll need a NVIDIA nForce 850 SLI MCP motherboard to start, then three GeForce 8800 GTX or 8800 Ultra cards to get the ultimate money-is-no-object gaming rig.
Check www.slizone.com for a list of 3-way SLI certified components.
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December 12th, 2007

NVIDIA have released their 8800 GTS 512MB, a second revision of their 8800 GTS line. The card relies on 65nm technology to run cooler than ever, and packs 25% more power than the previous GTS. Unfortunately, benchmarks aren’t as impressive as many suspected they would be. The 8800 GTS 512MB comes close, but does not beat its older, bigger brother the 8800 GTX in an unoverclocked state. The GTS’s benefit over the GTX is a low price of US$299 and the built-in HD movie processing that takes virtually all of the work away from your CPU when watching high-definition content.
via gamesindustry.biz
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November 20th, 2007

NVIDIA today announced two new notebook GPUs - the GeForce 8800M GTX and GeForce 8800M GTS. With support for DirectX 9 and DirectX 10, the 8M Series is perfect for gamers who crave a portable machine capable of running system-melters like Crysis at high resolutions.
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October 30th, 2007

Before you go out to update your system because you saw the requirements of Crysis, stop and read this. Nvidia have just released their single slot cooled 8800 GT card that outperforms the rest of the line, except the 8800 GTX and Ultra. Yes, it performs better than its intended superior, the 8800 GTS.
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