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Nvidia Rolls Out Mid-Range DX10 Cards
By: Jayesh Mansukhani   |   Apr 18,2007

Nvidia seems to be really enjoying itself, in the absence of its competitor ATI in the graphical card market. They first introduced the powerful enthusiast solution, the 8800 GTX, which offered DX-10 support and brought 16x AA to the mainstream. Soon after that, we were inundated with their new releases, the 8800 GTS 640 MB and 320 MB, which were scaled down version of the GTX chip.

Now looking to extend the same lead that they are enjoying in the high-end market, Nvidia today has rolled out its latest series of budget and mid-range cards. The cards that have been released are the 8600 GTS, 8600 GT and 8500 GT. All three ranges of cards feature Shader Model 4.0, and come equipped with GigaThread technology and NVIDIA's Quantum Effects physics processing technology.

The 8600 GTS with its price point of Rs. 14,000 (Sparkle brand) slips neatly into the mid-range performer arena that is currently held by Nvidia's own 7900 GS. It has support for 32-stream processors clocked at 1.45 GHz with its core and memory clock speeds set at 675 MHz and 1.0 GHz, respectively. The 8600 GT which is priced at Rs. 10,000 is virtually similar to the 8600 sporting the same 32 stream processors. However in comparison to the 8600 GTS model, the 8600 GT has its stream processors down clocked to 1.18 GHz. Its core and memory clock are also running at lower speeds of 540 MHz and 700 MHz respectively. The final card in this latest release roundup is the 8500 GT which is purely a budget card. The 8500 GT is priced at Rs. 7,620, sports 16 stream processors running at a speed of 900 MHz and has its core and memory clock speeds set at 450 MHz and 400 MHz respectively.

Nvidia thankfully for each of these new releases have not done a paper launch. Each of these cards are now available under the Sparkle brand-name which is available with Abacus Peripherals.

 
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can any one tell me what is the street price of 8500GT in mumbai
prakhyat @ Apr 25,2007
can any one tell me the exact street price of all these three cards in BANGALORE.
pushpak @ Apr 20,2007
other than my processor(pentium 4) every thing else is fine. so is it worth buying 8600 gt .i think 1.25 gb ram won't be a problem
rohit @ Apr 19,2007
dont worry the performance difference is only because the drivers are not right yet... once they are in place the performance is expected to shoot up... Also, it is not entirely sure that DX10 is goin to be for VISTA alone... they have to bring ouit the XP version at some point...

Also, the performance difference will reverse once DX10 games start rolling put...

If u are buying a new PC and are keen on future proofing it then def go for these DX10 cards... if u want the best performance now and dont care about the DX10 games that are comin round the corner and never ever plan to move onto VISTA (although all bugs and driver probs in VISTA should be fixed within 6 months) then go for the tried and tested DX9 cards...
zach @ Apr 19,2007
That is good news. However, I'm gonna hold on to my cash until I see the performance of these cards in DirectX 10 games. And I'm also going to wait for the release of ATI's mid range cards. I'll invest in a mid-range DX10 card only when Vista and DX10 go mainstream, though. And I'm guessing that is not going to be anytime in the immediate future.
TehDevil @ Apr 18,2007
i'll buy 8600 gt coz i have to play crysis which will come by Q3 and many other cool titles
rocky @ Apr 18,2007
I checked out the review of of 8600GTS and 8600GT at AnandTech and found these cards do not perform as well as the current generation cards they are replacing, atleast for current generation games on WinXP. Moreover they are highly overpriced in Inida. SO a 7900GS available for 10k is going to perform better than a 8800GTS available for 14k in most current generation games. So if you are not into Vista and DX10 gaming , stick to your previous graphics card.
Soham Dutta @ Apr 18,2007
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