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- Dead Island studio Techland announces new shooter 'Dying Light,' published by Warner Bros.
- Xbox One HUD image could be teasing half a dozen unannounced games
- Nintendo's E3 Nintendo Direct event to go live on June 11 at 7AM PT, prepare your Wii U
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- Trailer for new BlazBlue: Chrono Phantasm is a treat for the fans and shows off new characters
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Update: Power consumption numbers have now been made available on the last page!
Introduction
It is an odd situation indeed when technology is entirely obsolesced within eight months of release, but it is a pattern that NVIDIA are clearly promoting. The release of the 7800 GTX in June of 2005 was really quite a groundbreaking leap in performance. By March of this year however, a marginally faster 7900 GT could be had for just nearly half the price that the 7800 GTX originally released for. Arguably not a simple refresh product, the 7900 GTX brought even greater levels of performance to the high end segment, only to be overshadowed by the 7950 GX2 three months later (as far as single cards go).
One would assume that this rapid product release pace would eventually have to stop somewhere. The rumors, however, began flying faster than ever soon after the 7900 series release that NVIDIA's first DirectX 10 product was expected to ship within the year! Along with these tidbits were rumblings of massive power requirements and seperate power supplies designed specifically to handle the new DirectX GPU's from NVIDIA as well as from ATI. These rumors reaffirmed that NVIDIA was not simply making a DirectX 10 compatible 7900, but instead were pushing for an entirely new, presumably immensely powerful, GPU architecture.
This brings us to the past month where we have seen most, if not all of the details surrounding today's release hit the internet in one form or another. These details only solidified everyone's ideas on how new and improved this card was actually going to be. NVIDIA have spent four years developing the G80 which is being brought to retail in two forms, as the GeForce 8800 GTX and the GeForce 8800 GTS. We will be taking a look at the all new architecture to see what's changed as well as looking at our card specifically, the GeForce 8800 GTS from BFG.
Before we dive into the details however, here is a chart highlighting the specifications of the two new cards. There are likely a couple of perplexing numbers there and we will be covering those over the next few pages so keep reading!

Introduction
It is an odd situation indeed when technology is entirely obsolesced within eight months of release, but it is a pattern that NVIDIA are clearly promoting. The release of the 7800 GTX in June of 2005 was really quite a groundbreaking leap in performance. By March of this year however, a marginally faster 7900 GT could be had for just nearly half the price that the 7800 GTX originally released for. Arguably not a simple refresh product, the 7900 GTX brought even greater levels of performance to the high end segment, only to be overshadowed by the 7950 GX2 three months later (as far as single cards go).
One would assume that this rapid product release pace would eventually have to stop somewhere. The rumors, however, began flying faster than ever soon after the 7900 series release that NVIDIA's first DirectX 10 product was expected to ship within the year! Along with these tidbits were rumblings of massive power requirements and seperate power supplies designed specifically to handle the new DirectX GPU's from NVIDIA as well as from ATI. These rumors reaffirmed that NVIDIA was not simply making a DirectX 10 compatible 7900, but instead were pushing for an entirely new, presumably immensely powerful, GPU architecture.
This brings us to the past month where we have seen most, if not all of the details surrounding today's release hit the internet in one form or another. These details only solidified everyone's ideas on how new and improved this card was actually going to be. NVIDIA have spent four years developing the G80 which is being brought to retail in two forms, as the GeForce 8800 GTX and the GeForce 8800 GTS. We will be taking a look at the all new architecture to see what's changed as well as looking at our card specifically, the GeForce 8800 GTS from BFG.
Before we dive into the details however, here is a chart highlighting the specifications of the two new cards. There are likely a couple of perplexing numbers there and we will be covering those over the next few pages so keep reading!

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ATi really screwed up if the R600 doesn't absolutely demolish the G80. Well, sure, some hardcore ATi fans are still waiting on the R600, but come on, I'm tired of waiting on it.
Hard Drive
Western Digital WD5000AAKS 500GB SATA II 7200RPM 16MB Cache
£75.99
Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo E6420 (2.13Ghz) Socket 775 FSB1066 4MB Cache Retail Boxed Processor
£123.14
DVD/CD Drive
LG GSA-H42LBL 18x DVD±RW DL/RAM Lightscribe Internal - Black Bare OEM
£19.97
Motherboard
Asus P5N-E SLI 650i Socket 775 Onboard Audio ATX
£68.71
PSU
Antec Basiq Power 500W ATX 12V PSU
£37.65
Case
PCICASE CS2600-BKS1 Hyperline II Black/Silver ATX Tower Case - No PSU
£21.98
RAM
Corsair 2GB Kit (2x1GB) DDR2 800MHz/PC2-6400 XMS2 Performance Memory CL5 1.9V Matched Pair with Heat Spreaders
£89.36
Graphics Card
http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/125183
BFG 8800GTS OC 320MB DDR3 Dual DVI PCI-E
£185.65
Windows Vista
Microsoft Windows Vista Home Premium x64Bit OEM 1PK DVD
£71.66 (Bought with hardware)
Monitor
http://www.ebuyer.com/UK/product/118009/rb/27417150681
Xerox XM3-19W 19" Widescreen (1440 X 900) 5ms 800:1 Black 'plug & play' TFT Monitor
£122.23
Offers:
- £10 off for orders over £30
- Free delivery on orders over £89
Bearing in mind that I am not a hardcore gamer, and the PC is primarily for Uni work - but I would also like to be able to play Call of Duty 4 as well as possible when it comes out.
What is your opinion of the BFG card in the setup? I think the price difference between the GS and the GTX make the GTX far too expensive.
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