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  1. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from Logue in High Quality Video Playback On Windows   
    MPC-BE + madVR + LAV Filters

     

     
    In this tutorial I will show you how to setup MPC-BE, madVR and LAV Filters.
     
    For those who are looking for a little something more than what standard media players such as VLC offer.
     

    Step 1 - Download

    MPC-BE madVR LAV Filters
    Step 2 - Installation

    Install MPC-BE. Extract madVR to a fresh madVR folder, and then copy it to the MPC-BE install directory (C:\Program Files (x86)\MPC-BE). Inside the madVR folder right click madHcCtrl.exe and select properties. At the bottom under Securty click the Unblock button and then Apply -> Ok. This will stop the annoying "potentially unsafe software" run window from popping up every time MPC-BE loads madVR.​ Install LAV Filters, make sure you un-check all of the components except for what is pictured below.
     
    You should now have everything installed with a MPC-BE directory setup that looks something like this.
     

     
    Next we install madVR. Navigate into the madVR folder and you should spot a install.bat batch file. Right click on it and run it as an administrator.
     

     
    If all goes well you should get a console window with a message saying the filter was registered successfully.
     

    Step 3 - Configuring MPC-BE

     
    Now it is time to configure MPC-BE to use these fabulous new pieces of software. Launch MPC-BE and navigate to View -> Options.
     
    Next navigate to the Video section. You should see a drop down menu option labeled Video renderer and set it to madVR.
     

     
    Now navigate to Internal Filters and disable everything for both Video Decoders and Audio Decoders tabs.
     

     
    With all of them disabled we will want to add the custom decoders that MPC-BE will use instead. So navigate to External Filters and click the Add Filter... button.
     
    Select LAV Audio Decoder from the list and hit OK.
     

     
    LAV Audio Decoder should now exist in the External Filters list. Off to the right there are a set of combo box options, make sure you set it to Prefer.
     

     
    Now follow the last two steps and do the same for LAV Video Decoder.
     
    Optional: Lastly navigate to Player -> Interface and enable the option Use the preview in the search (this will enable a thumbnail as you hover over the video timeline).
     

    Step 4 - Configuring LAV Filters

     
    Once you have both of them added to the list double click on LAV Video Decoder within the list. You should be confronted with a window like so.
     

     
    From the drop down menu in the top right, select the appropriate decoder for your GPU. The following guide should help you make the right choice.
    None – Stick to high performance software decoding (you need a moderately strong CPU). NVIDIA CUVID – CUDA decoding (see here for PureVideo version).Make sure you configure the Codecs for HW decoding according to the nVidia GPU you have. nVidia PureVideo 2 – H.264 and DVD. nVidia PureVideo 3 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2 and DVD. nVidia PureVideo 4 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2, DVD and MPEG-4. nVidia PureVideo 5 and 6 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2, DVD, MPEG-4 and HEVC. Also enable the UHD (4k) option if you have PureVideo 5 or later GPUs. Intel QuickSync – For Sandy Bridge, Ivy Bridge, and Haswell CPU's. DXVA2 (copy-back) – Recommended for Nvidia GPU's and ATI/AMD with UVD3.CPU with SSE 4.1 support is recommended. AMD – Bulldozer or newer. Intel – Penryn or newer. DXVA2 (native) – Recommended for older ATI/AMD GPU's with UVD 2.x.  

    Step 5 - Configuring madVR

     
    You can access the madVR settings by playing any video and right clicking anywhere in the video player and going to Filters -> madVR Renderer.
     
    From there click Edit Settings.
     
    Rendering -> General Settings
    Disable enable automatic fullscreen exclusive mode. Scaling Algorithms
    Chroma Upscaling – Jinc, 3 taps, anti-ringing. Image Upscaling – Jinc, 3 taps, anti-ringing. Image Downscaling – Catmull-Rom, anti-ringing + linear light.  

    Step 6 - Enjoy

     
    MPC-BE is all finished and you can now enjoy better quality video playback on your Windows machine.
     

     
    Anyways, have fun!
  2. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from MightyBoo in High Quality Video Playback On Windows   
    MPC-BE + madVR + LAV Filters

     

     
    In this tutorial I will show you how to setup MPC-BE, madVR and LAV Filters.
     
    For those who are looking for a little something more than what standard media players such as VLC offer.
     

    Step 1 - Download

    MPC-BE madVR LAV Filters
    Step 2 - Installation

    Install MPC-BE. Extract madVR to a fresh madVR folder, and then copy it to the MPC-BE install directory (C:\Program Files (x86)\MPC-BE). Inside the madVR folder right click madHcCtrl.exe and select properties. At the bottom under Securty click the Unblock button and then Apply -> Ok. This will stop the annoying "potentially unsafe software" run window from popping up every time MPC-BE loads madVR.​ Install LAV Filters, make sure you un-check all of the components except for what is pictured below.
     
    You should now have everything installed with a MPC-BE directory setup that looks something like this.
     

     
    Next we install madVR. Navigate into the madVR folder and you should spot a install.bat batch file. Right click on it and run it as an administrator.
     

     
    If all goes well you should get a console window with a message saying the filter was registered successfully.
     

    Step 3 - Configuring MPC-BE

     
    Now it is time to configure MPC-BE to use these fabulous new pieces of software. Launch MPC-BE and navigate to View -> Options.
     
    Next navigate to the Video section. You should see a drop down menu option labeled Video renderer and set it to madVR.
     

     
    Now navigate to Internal Filters and disable everything for both Video Decoders and Audio Decoders tabs.
     

     
    With all of them disabled we will want to add the custom decoders that MPC-BE will use instead. So navigate to External Filters and click the Add Filter... button.
     
    Select LAV Audio Decoder from the list and hit OK.
     

     
    LAV Audio Decoder should now exist in the External Filters list. Off to the right there are a set of combo box options, make sure you set it to Prefer.
     

     
    Now follow the last two steps and do the same for LAV Video Decoder.
     
    Optional: Lastly navigate to Player -> Interface and enable the option Use the preview in the search (this will enable a thumbnail as you hover over the video timeline).
     

    Step 4 - Configuring LAV Filters

     
    Once you have both of them added to the list double click on LAV Video Decoder within the list. You should be confronted with a window like so.
     

     
    From the drop down menu in the top right, select the appropriate decoder for your GPU. The following guide should help you make the right choice.
    None – Stick to high performance software decoding (you need a moderately strong CPU). NVIDIA CUVID – CUDA decoding (see here for PureVideo version).Make sure you configure the Codecs for HW decoding according to the nVidia GPU you have. nVidia PureVideo 2 – H.264 and DVD. nVidia PureVideo 3 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2 and DVD. nVidia PureVideo 4 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2, DVD and MPEG-4. nVidia PureVideo 5 and 6 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2, DVD, MPEG-4 and HEVC. Also enable the UHD (4k) option if you have PureVideo 5 or later GPUs. Intel QuickSync – For Sandy Bridge, Ivy Bridge, and Haswell CPU's. DXVA2 (copy-back) – Recommended for Nvidia GPU's and ATI/AMD with UVD3.CPU with SSE 4.1 support is recommended. AMD – Bulldozer or newer. Intel – Penryn or newer. DXVA2 (native) – Recommended for older ATI/AMD GPU's with UVD 2.x.  

    Step 5 - Configuring madVR

     
    You can access the madVR settings by playing any video and right clicking anywhere in the video player and going to Filters -> madVR Renderer.
     
    From there click Edit Settings.
     
    Rendering -> General Settings
    Disable enable automatic fullscreen exclusive mode. Scaling Algorithms
    Chroma Upscaling – Jinc, 3 taps, anti-ringing. Image Upscaling – Jinc, 3 taps, anti-ringing. Image Downscaling – Catmull-Rom, anti-ringing + linear light.  

    Step 6 - Enjoy

     
    MPC-BE is all finished and you can now enjoy better quality video playback on your Windows machine.
     

     
    Anyways, have fun!
  3. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from Kartexa in High Quality Video Playback On Windows   
    MPC-BE + madVR + LAV Filters

     

     
    In this tutorial I will show you how to setup MPC-BE, madVR and LAV Filters.
     
    For those who are looking for a little something more than what standard media players such as VLC offer.
     

    Step 1 - Download

    MPC-BE madVR LAV Filters
    Step 2 - Installation

    Install MPC-BE. Extract madVR to a fresh madVR folder, and then copy it to the MPC-BE install directory (C:\Program Files (x86)\MPC-BE). Inside the madVR folder right click madHcCtrl.exe and select properties. At the bottom under Securty click the Unblock button and then Apply -> Ok. This will stop the annoying "potentially unsafe software" run window from popping up every time MPC-BE loads madVR.​ Install LAV Filters, make sure you un-check all of the components except for what is pictured below.
     
    You should now have everything installed with a MPC-BE directory setup that looks something like this.
     

     
    Next we install madVR. Navigate into the madVR folder and you should spot a install.bat batch file. Right click on it and run it as an administrator.
     

     
    If all goes well you should get a console window with a message saying the filter was registered successfully.
     

    Step 3 - Configuring MPC-BE

     
    Now it is time to configure MPC-BE to use these fabulous new pieces of software. Launch MPC-BE and navigate to View -> Options.
     
    Next navigate to the Video section. You should see a drop down menu option labeled Video renderer and set it to madVR.
     

     
    Now navigate to Internal Filters and disable everything for both Video Decoders and Audio Decoders tabs.
     

     
    With all of them disabled we will want to add the custom decoders that MPC-BE will use instead. So navigate to External Filters and click the Add Filter... button.
     
    Select LAV Audio Decoder from the list and hit OK.
     

     
    LAV Audio Decoder should now exist in the External Filters list. Off to the right there are a set of combo box options, make sure you set it to Prefer.
     

     
    Now follow the last two steps and do the same for LAV Video Decoder.
     
    Optional: Lastly navigate to Player -> Interface and enable the option Use the preview in the search (this will enable a thumbnail as you hover over the video timeline).
     

    Step 4 - Configuring LAV Filters

     
    Once you have both of them added to the list double click on LAV Video Decoder within the list. You should be confronted with a window like so.
     

     
    From the drop down menu in the top right, select the appropriate decoder for your GPU. The following guide should help you make the right choice.
    None – Stick to high performance software decoding (you need a moderately strong CPU). NVIDIA CUVID – CUDA decoding (see here for PureVideo version).Make sure you configure the Codecs for HW decoding according to the nVidia GPU you have. nVidia PureVideo 2 – H.264 and DVD. nVidia PureVideo 3 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2 and DVD. nVidia PureVideo 4 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2, DVD and MPEG-4. nVidia PureVideo 5 and 6 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2, DVD, MPEG-4 and HEVC. Also enable the UHD (4k) option if you have PureVideo 5 or later GPUs. Intel QuickSync – For Sandy Bridge, Ivy Bridge, and Haswell CPU's. DXVA2 (copy-back) – Recommended for Nvidia GPU's and ATI/AMD with UVD3.CPU with SSE 4.1 support is recommended. AMD – Bulldozer or newer. Intel – Penryn or newer. DXVA2 (native) – Recommended for older ATI/AMD GPU's with UVD 2.x.  

    Step 5 - Configuring madVR

     
    You can access the madVR settings by playing any video and right clicking anywhere in the video player and going to Filters -> madVR Renderer.
     
    From there click Edit Settings.
     
    Rendering -> General Settings
    Disable enable automatic fullscreen exclusive mode. Scaling Algorithms
    Chroma Upscaling – Jinc, 3 taps, anti-ringing. Image Upscaling – Jinc, 3 taps, anti-ringing. Image Downscaling – Catmull-Rom, anti-ringing + linear light.  

    Step 6 - Enjoy

     
    MPC-BE is all finished and you can now enjoy better quality video playback on your Windows machine.
     

     
    Anyways, have fun!
  4. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from DededeKirby in AMD - A New Era In PC Gaming   
    Source
     

     
    >>> Live Stream <<<
    Time: 9:00 am PST / 12:00 pm EST
     
     

     

     

     

     

     
    Fury
    4096 SPUs 4GB HBM 500 MHz (512 GB/s) Air & Water Cooled 275w $549 July 14 Fury X
    4096 SPUs ~1050 MHz Engine Clock 4GB HBM 500 MHz (512 GB/s) Water Cooled < 50C @ < 32 dBA 275w 6 Phase 400A Power Delivery 7.5" Card $649 June 24
  5. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from Coaxialgamer in Windows 10 Insider Topic   
  6. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from TechGod in AMD’s Lisa Su: high-end "Zen" x86 cores set to be available in 2016   
    x64 is only an extension of x86.
  7. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from TechGod in AMD x86 16-core Zen APU detailed   
    You're blindly following a company way to deep to where it's making you sound quite irrational.
  8. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from RudeViper in High Quality Video Playback On Windows   
    MPC-BE + madVR + LAV Filters

     

     
    In this tutorial I will show you how to setup MPC-BE, madVR and LAV Filters.
     
    For those who are looking for a little something more than what standard media players such as VLC offer.
     

    Step 1 - Download

    MPC-BE madVR LAV Filters
    Step 2 - Installation

    Install MPC-BE. Extract madVR to a fresh madVR folder, and then copy it to the MPC-BE install directory (C:\Program Files (x86)\MPC-BE). Inside the madVR folder right click madHcCtrl.exe and select properties. At the bottom under Securty click the Unblock button and then Apply -> Ok. This will stop the annoying "potentially unsafe software" run window from popping up every time MPC-BE loads madVR.​ Install LAV Filters, make sure you un-check all of the components except for what is pictured below.
     
    You should now have everything installed with a MPC-BE directory setup that looks something like this.
     

     
    Next we install madVR. Navigate into the madVR folder and you should spot a install.bat batch file. Right click on it and run it as an administrator.
     

     
    If all goes well you should get a console window with a message saying the filter was registered successfully.
     

    Step 3 - Configuring MPC-BE

     
    Now it is time to configure MPC-BE to use these fabulous new pieces of software. Launch MPC-BE and navigate to View -> Options.
     
    Next navigate to the Video section. You should see a drop down menu option labeled Video renderer and set it to madVR.
     

     
    Now navigate to Internal Filters and disable everything for both Video Decoders and Audio Decoders tabs.
     

     
    With all of them disabled we will want to add the custom decoders that MPC-BE will use instead. So navigate to External Filters and click the Add Filter... button.
     
    Select LAV Audio Decoder from the list and hit OK.
     

     
    LAV Audio Decoder should now exist in the External Filters list. Off to the right there are a set of combo box options, make sure you set it to Prefer.
     

     
    Now follow the last two steps and do the same for LAV Video Decoder.
     
    Optional: Lastly navigate to Player -> Interface and enable the option Use the preview in the search (this will enable a thumbnail as you hover over the video timeline).
     

    Step 4 - Configuring LAV Filters

     
    Once you have both of them added to the list double click on LAV Video Decoder within the list. You should be confronted with a window like so.
     

     
    From the drop down menu in the top right, select the appropriate decoder for your GPU. The following guide should help you make the right choice.
    None – Stick to high performance software decoding (you need a moderately strong CPU). NVIDIA CUVID – CUDA decoding (see here for PureVideo version).Make sure you configure the Codecs for HW decoding according to the nVidia GPU you have. nVidia PureVideo 2 – H.264 and DVD. nVidia PureVideo 3 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2 and DVD. nVidia PureVideo 4 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2, DVD and MPEG-4. nVidia PureVideo 5 and 6 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2, DVD, MPEG-4 and HEVC. Also enable the UHD (4k) option if you have PureVideo 5 or later GPUs. Intel QuickSync – For Sandy Bridge, Ivy Bridge, and Haswell CPU's. DXVA2 (copy-back) – Recommended for Nvidia GPU's and ATI/AMD with UVD3.CPU with SSE 4.1 support is recommended. AMD – Bulldozer or newer. Intel – Penryn or newer. DXVA2 (native) – Recommended for older ATI/AMD GPU's with UVD 2.x.  

    Step 5 - Configuring madVR

     
    You can access the madVR settings by playing any video and right clicking anywhere in the video player and going to Filters -> madVR Renderer.
     
    From there click Edit Settings.
     
    Rendering -> General Settings
    Disable enable automatic fullscreen exclusive mode. Scaling Algorithms
    Chroma Upscaling – Jinc, 3 taps, anti-ringing. Image Upscaling – Jinc, 3 taps, anti-ringing. Image Downscaling – Catmull-Rom, anti-ringing + linear light.  

    Step 6 - Enjoy

     
    MPC-BE is all finished and you can now enjoy better quality video playback on your Windows machine.
     

     
    Anyways, have fun!
  9. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from Timmy-P in High Quality Video Playback On Windows   
    MPC-BE + madVR + LAV Filters

     

     
    In this tutorial I will show you how to setup MPC-BE, madVR and LAV Filters.
     
    For those who are looking for a little something more than what standard media players such as VLC offer.
     

    Step 1 - Download

    MPC-BE madVR LAV Filters
    Step 2 - Installation

    Install MPC-BE. Extract madVR to a fresh madVR folder, and then copy it to the MPC-BE install directory (C:\Program Files (x86)\MPC-BE). Inside the madVR folder right click madHcCtrl.exe and select properties. At the bottom under Securty click the Unblock button and then Apply -> Ok. This will stop the annoying "potentially unsafe software" run window from popping up every time MPC-BE loads madVR.​ Install LAV Filters, make sure you un-check all of the components except for what is pictured below.
     
    You should now have everything installed with a MPC-BE directory setup that looks something like this.
     

     
    Next we install madVR. Navigate into the madVR folder and you should spot a install.bat batch file. Right click on it and run it as an administrator.
     

     
    If all goes well you should get a console window with a message saying the filter was registered successfully.
     

    Step 3 - Configuring MPC-BE

     
    Now it is time to configure MPC-BE to use these fabulous new pieces of software. Launch MPC-BE and navigate to View -> Options.
     
    Next navigate to the Video section. You should see a drop down menu option labeled Video renderer and set it to madVR.
     

     
    Now navigate to Internal Filters and disable everything for both Video Decoders and Audio Decoders tabs.
     

     
    With all of them disabled we will want to add the custom decoders that MPC-BE will use instead. So navigate to External Filters and click the Add Filter... button.
     
    Select LAV Audio Decoder from the list and hit OK.
     

     
    LAV Audio Decoder should now exist in the External Filters list. Off to the right there are a set of combo box options, make sure you set it to Prefer.
     

     
    Now follow the last two steps and do the same for LAV Video Decoder.
     
    Optional: Lastly navigate to Player -> Interface and enable the option Use the preview in the search (this will enable a thumbnail as you hover over the video timeline).
     

    Step 4 - Configuring LAV Filters

     
    Once you have both of them added to the list double click on LAV Video Decoder within the list. You should be confronted with a window like so.
     

     
    From the drop down menu in the top right, select the appropriate decoder for your GPU. The following guide should help you make the right choice.
    None – Stick to high performance software decoding (you need a moderately strong CPU). NVIDIA CUVID – CUDA decoding (see here for PureVideo version).Make sure you configure the Codecs for HW decoding according to the nVidia GPU you have. nVidia PureVideo 2 – H.264 and DVD. nVidia PureVideo 3 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2 and DVD. nVidia PureVideo 4 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2, DVD and MPEG-4. nVidia PureVideo 5 and 6 – H.264, VC-1, MPEG-2, DVD, MPEG-4 and HEVC. Also enable the UHD (4k) option if you have PureVideo 5 or later GPUs. Intel QuickSync – For Sandy Bridge, Ivy Bridge, and Haswell CPU's. DXVA2 (copy-back) – Recommended for Nvidia GPU's and ATI/AMD with UVD3.CPU with SSE 4.1 support is recommended. AMD – Bulldozer or newer. Intel – Penryn or newer. DXVA2 (native) – Recommended for older ATI/AMD GPU's with UVD 2.x.  

    Step 5 - Configuring madVR

     
    You can access the madVR settings by playing any video and right clicking anywhere in the video player and going to Filters -> madVR Renderer.
     
    From there click Edit Settings.
     
    Rendering -> General Settings
    Disable enable automatic fullscreen exclusive mode. Scaling Algorithms
    Chroma Upscaling – Jinc, 3 taps, anti-ringing. Image Upscaling – Jinc, 3 taps, anti-ringing. Image Downscaling – Catmull-Rom, anti-ringing + linear light.  

    Step 6 - Enjoy

     
    MPC-BE is all finished and you can now enjoy better quality video playback on your Windows machine.
     

     
    Anyways, have fun!
  10. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from kirashi in Best Linux OS for Power Mac G4?   
    Ubuntu Mate may become your distribution of choice as they took over maintaining the PowerPC platform (Ubuntu quit maintaining it after 6.10).
  11. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from BurgerBum in Almost forgot to say Hi! :)   
  12. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from Admiral Naismith in [15+ please] "Pleasure dolls" with personality, is it going too far ?   
    You can buy a really nice ride for that much money and it will get you the real thing.
  13. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from tech_splitter in AMD Fury X Far Cry 4 game performance from AMD   
    So if these numbers are valid across the board then AMD's $649 card stomps GM200 into the ground with 1/3 of the memory?
     

  14. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from 7850OC in AMD's own testing? Fury X vs GTX 980Ti   
    Indeed, it's pretty much borderline with TITAN X performance with these numbers meanwhile being $350 cheaper still.
  15. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from Kobz360 in Radeon R9 Fury series is based on GCN 1.2 - source Anand   
    Based on GCN 1.2 doesn't mean it's a straight Tonga copy and paste. This is like the twentieth post by this guy who's clearly out on a AMD hate rampage.
     
     
     
     
    If I could dig up all of his similar posts over the past few days I could fill four pages of a new thread.
     
    Watch AMD launch GCN 1.3 with Fiji and I'll die laughing. We have no proof that a GCN 1.3 revision doesn't exist.
  16. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from Gunjob in Radeon R9 Fury series is based on GCN 1.2 - source Anand   
    Based on GCN 1.2 doesn't mean it's a straight Tonga copy and paste. This is like the twentieth post by this guy who's clearly out on a AMD hate rampage.
     
     
     
     
    If I could dig up all of his similar posts over the past few days I could fill four pages of a new thread.
     
    Watch AMD launch GCN 1.3 with Fiji and I'll die laughing. We have no proof that a GCN 1.3 revision doesn't exist.
  17. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from WolfDeville in [15+ please] "Pleasure dolls" with personality, is it going too far ?   
    You can buy a really nice ride for that much money and it will get you the real thing.
  18. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from carolkarine in Radeon R9 Fury series is based on GCN 1.2 - source Anand   
    Based on GCN 1.2 doesn't mean it's a straight Tonga copy and paste. This is like the twentieth post by this guy who's clearly out on a AMD hate rampage.
     
     
     
     
    If I could dig up all of his similar posts over the past few days I could fill four pages of a new thread.
     
    Watch AMD launch GCN 1.3 with Fiji and I'll die laughing. We have no proof that a GCN 1.3 revision doesn't exist.
  19. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from Deletive in AMD's own testing? Fury X vs GTX 980Ti   
    You do understand that falsely advertising product performance can end in a lawsuit? Intel suffered it with the P4 for fabricating benchmarks.
     
    If they were going to cherry pick numbers why in the hell would they go with FC4 and not Sleeping Dogs where they light a fire under Nvidia's ass according to the chart?
     
    This is why I urge anyone to take them as just rumors (they came from Reddit, need I say more) and wait until independent reviews are out before drawing conclusions.
  20. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from xAcid9 in Radeon R9 Fury series is based on GCN 1.2 - source Anand   
    Based on GCN 1.2 doesn't mean it's a straight Tonga copy and paste. This is like the twentieth post by this guy who's clearly out on a AMD hate rampage.
     
     
     
     
    If I could dig up all of his similar posts over the past few days I could fill four pages of a new thread.
     
    Watch AMD launch GCN 1.3 with Fiji and I'll die laughing. We have no proof that a GCN 1.3 revision doesn't exist.
  21. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from jbslayer in Radeon R9 Fury series is based on GCN 1.2 - source Anand   
    Based on GCN 1.2 doesn't mean it's a straight Tonga copy and paste. This is like the twentieth post by this guy who's clearly out on a AMD hate rampage.
     
     
     
     
    If I could dig up all of his similar posts over the past few days I could fill four pages of a new thread.
     
    Watch AMD launch GCN 1.3 with Fiji and I'll die laughing. We have no proof that a GCN 1.3 revision doesn't exist.
  22. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from dalekphalm in AMD's own testing? Fury X vs GTX 980Ti   
    You do understand that falsely advertising product performance can end in a lawsuit? Intel suffered it with the P4 for fabricating benchmarks.
     
    If they were going to cherry pick numbers why in the hell would they go with FC4 and not Sleeping Dogs where they light a fire under Nvidia's ass according to the chart?
     
    This is why I urge anyone to take them as just rumors (they came from Reddit, need I say more) and wait until independent reviews are out before drawing conclusions.
  23. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from Pesmerga in Radeon Fury X Outperforms GeForce GTX Titan X @ $650   
    A post I conformed in another thread I think really puts the whole "4GB not being enough" at ease.
     
  24. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from LAwLz in AMD Fury X Far Cry 4 game performance from AMD   
    That's the problem when comparing results from different sources. There's a lot of variables to take into consideration such as other hardware, drivers, etc. We won't really know how Fiji performs until someone sits down and benches Fury X, TITAN X, GTX 980 Ti and a handful of other cards in the same system with all of the latest WHQL released drivers. Although even still Fury X is out performing a G1 GTX 980 Ti which is still pretty impressive at much lower clocks. The biggest problem is there's only one source and one result for Fury X performance and that being AMD. It's too bad they won't just lift NDA already and let the gates flood with benchmarks.
  25. Like
    Opcode got a reaction from Bouzoo in AMD Fury X Far Cry 4 game performance from AMD   
    Not that I've seen, nothing worth reiterating in the first place in an AMD oriented thread. We only care about Fury X performance against the competition, not so much TITAN X vs 980 Ti. Whatever results we come by some having both GM200 products benchmarked in them, we just go by whichever performs better. So far it's been an onslaught with Nvidia unable to match said performance until you start heavily overclocking their products. Although we're still talking about only one game, one result and without any direct comparisons to other products. So everything is still what I like to call, inconclusive.
     
    Although I don't mind liking to think that Fiji is just going to pulverize GM200, we'll find out soon enough.
     
    Ignore lists do you no favors if you actually think about it. If you ignore someone they can still quote you and pick at your posts meanwhile you remain oblivious to it.
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