I didn't first believe it, as with ANY PR benchmarks put on PowerPoint presentation, but apparently nVidia did not lie: <A HREF="http://graphics.tomshardware.com/graphic/20040907/geforce_6600-08.html" target="_new">http://graphics.tomshardware.com/graphic/20040907/geforce_6600-08.html</A>
The card actually does better without AA too. Over 42FPS.
With AA and AF, it falls short by .1 FPS.
Compare it to the nVidia PR here: <A HREF="http://graphics.tomshardware.com/graphic/20040812/geforce_6600-04.html" target="_new">http://graphics.tomshardware.com/graphic/20040812/geforce_6600-04.html</A>
Makes you wonder though. Since when do the companies themselves actually live up to their ideal world?
What's next, actual high quality prints come out at 22ppm on modern printers?
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The card actually does better without AA too. Over 42FPS.
With AA and AF, it falls short by .1 FPS.
Compare it to the nVidia PR here: <A HREF="http://graphics.tomshardware.com/graphic/20040812/geforce_6600-04.html" target="_new">http://graphics.tomshardware.com/graphic/20040812/geforce_6600-04.html</A>
Makes you wonder though. Since when do the companies themselves actually live up to their ideal world?
What's next, actual high quality prints come out at 22ppm on modern printers?
--
<A HREF="http://www.lochel.com/THGC/album.php" target="_new"><font color=red><b>The THGC Photo Album revision Eden, faster updated than ever before!</A></b></font color=red>