AMD Launches Kaveri APU with Radeon R7 Graphics
AMD Launches Kaveri APU with Radeon R7 Graphics. AMD fans are getting...
Among the many things we saw at this year’s 2014 CES NVIDIA had one of the coolest gaming displays. We got to take a close look at the NVIDIA 4K Two-Way Titan SLI G-Sync DEMO! We saw a few racing games being shown off at NVIDIA’s booth that sat occupied its own corner of the South Hall at the LVCC. NVIDIA was one of the few companies still having its own presence on the show floor, as many PC only companies have now shuffled off the floor and into hotel suites.
NVIDIA has so far survived the massive decline that has hit the PC industry at large. I remember the days when the entire show room floor was PC based for as far as the eye could see. NVIDIA was also showing off a system the featured 2X Titans, but their main focus was on their new G-Sync monitors. NVIDIA gave us a demonstration of the technology but it was very hard to capture on video the actual reproduction of what is being filmed. This is due being that one source (Camera) is fixed and the other (Monitor) is alternating causing issues with capturing accurate footage.
The major complaint gamers have right now is the price of the technology, but when PhysX was first out it was a stand-alone card that every one scoffed at, and now it is standard issues on all NVIDIA cards with no extra charge. G-Sync will be the same way, and as the technology gets embraced and infused into the market, it will eventually become something just known to work well. Then it will not be too expensive for the common man. Anyways check out the video and see all the companies that are already working with NVDIA, which shows that this is something at least worth checking out in person if possible. There has been a lot of talk about Free-Sync and other “Free” solutions, but if those solutions were the one that actually worked best I think they would have been the one showing off their demos at CES, not NVIDIA. Have any of you actually used in of these other solutions? I know it is hard to tell in the video, but the technology does work. Thanks for reading Tech Of Tomorrow.