According to BSN, it seems that the HD6000 launch is imminent. :D
AMD to launch Radeon HD 6000 Series, "Southern Islands" on October 12, 2010
While nVidia was closing down the GPU Technology Conference, we learned that the company invited a ton of journalists to the event in Los Angeles, CA. The event is none other than the launch of Radeon HD 6000 Series, more known to the world under the codename "Southern Islands".
I wished there were more details about the video ports on the card. Will displayport still be a requirement and will we still need to have three identical monitors to enable bezel correction?
I'm just wondering how performance in eyefinity and crossfire will be handled.
Did they redesign the crossfire bridge to handle resolution over 2560x1600?
Will they have cards with 3 or more DL-DVI ports?
What exactly are the requirements this time for eyefinity?
Are there going to be standard cards with 2GB (or more) of usable VRAM?
Midrange AMD HD6000 cards will be launched first to combat Nvidia's mainstream (e.g. gtx460).
If what I have read is true, the 6770 will not be far off the 5870 performance actually, so it will combat the GTX470, if all is according to the spec sheets.
Can we expect an Eyefinity 6 card?
I'm probably looking at holding out for Sandybridge now at this point so got some months to spare yet but hope the six output card is still going to feature in the new range.
Because we all know that spec sheets represent reality :lol:
Laugh if you want, we will see in 11 days. But what would be the point of releasing a midrange card barely any faster than the old midrange card anyway? With a 5770 for £100 now, and a new one (which could be barely any faster for £140 like the 5770 was recently) would anyone spend £40 more? Not many would. If the card isn't in the 5850+ teritory I don't think it will have enough appeal to stop people buying GTX460's because it is for certain going to be priced in that ballpark.
UVD3 namely Universal Video Decoder 3 is a new version of the graphics within an integrated hardware-based support for H.264 and VC-1 video decoding formats.