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What's the EVGA equivalent for ATI manufacturers?

Forum Graphic & Displays : ATI - What's the EVGA equivalent for ATI manufacturers?

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I mostly purchased Nvidia products stretching all the way back to Voodoo3 3000 (technically 3Dfx is part of Nvidia as they have been purchased by them). However now that they have stated they will no longer be focusing on PC gaming I will no longer be supporting them. So I was wondering if there are any company manufacturing ATI gpu that are the equivalent of EVGA for Nvidia gpu?

EVGA has wonderful customer support, have high clock speeds, and last but not least they offer a setup program.

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Suzaku wrote :

However now that they have stated they will no longer be focusing on PC gaming I will no longer be supporting them.



Where was this stated? It makes little sense to me given their primary business.

Reply to rockyjohn

for support on ati i trust diamond and his, sapphire has some of the best cards but support sucks


Message edited by obsidian86 on 09-21-2009 at 08:15:21 PM
------------------------------ I took a step back to look at the bigger picture and realized i needed better glasses
Reply to obsidian86

rockyjohn wrote :

Where was this stated? It makes little sense to me given their primary business.




Here


Quote :

Are PC games no longer the driving force behind graphics cards? That's the indication Nvidia made Wednesday at the Deutsche Bank Securities Technology Conference, saying that the upcoming DirectX 11 application programming interface (API) will not be what drives future sales. Instead, Nvidia said the graphics market will pocket wads of cash from general purpose computing on graphics processing units (GPGPU). Tools for GPGPU and software taking advantage of the technology will also propel sales, not DirectX 11-driven PC games.


Reply to Suzaku

Well, Sapphire is the premier Ati manufacturer, not sure about their support though. XFX makes ati cards now but again, im not sure about their support services.

Reply to bige420

The best manufacturer of any card out there is XFX when it comes to customer service and warranty. When it comes to highly overclocked and modified versions of cards Asus, HIS, and Sapphire tend to be the best, XFX uses only reference cooling.

Reply to The_Blood_Raven

And no AMD manufacturer has a setup program. In short, there is no single company to look for. Asus probably has the highest speeds I've seen in their "top" cards. HiS has the best coolers. Sapphire sells the most cards, and is very cheap. I'd still double check all the Sapphire specs as they've done things they shouldn't have in the past. The most famous is selling the 9800pro with a 128bit memory bus. Asus/XFX have the better warranties from what I've heard. Up to you to decide which you want.

------------------------------ The voice of REASON
Do NOT feed the TROLLS!
Always a DEMON!
Reply to 4745454b

Sapphire for good cards but limited support

XFX for both

Suzaku wrote :

Here


Quote :

Are PC games no longer the driving force behind graphics cards? That's the indication Nvidia made Wednesday at the Deutsche Bank Securities Technology Conference, saying that the upcoming DirectX 11 application programming interface (API) will not be what drives future sales. Instead, Nvidia said the graphics market will pocket wads of cash from general purpose computing on graphics processing units (GPGPU). Tools for GPGPU and software taking advantage of the technology will also propel sales, not DirectX 11-driven PC games.




I wouldn't take this too seriously, this is just some bs they threw out to make their current cards look competitive with the new DX11 ATI cards coming out since Nvidia's DX11 cards are probably going to be delayed.

Reply to turboflame

That quote does not say that nVidia "will no longer be focusing on PC gaming" as you stated - but that it will not be what drives future sales. Huge difference. And certainly no reason to ignore or give up on nVidia cards.

GIGO


Message edited by rockyjohn on 09-21-2009 at 10:55:01 PM
Reply to rockyjohn
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