General Gaming Article

General Gaming Article


Valve Assures Anti-Cheat Program is Not Recording Browser History

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 01:04 PM PST

Valve LogoCompany tries to thwart cheat developers by making it financially unfeasible

In response to a Reddit thread claiming that the Valve Anti-Cheat (VAC) program records users' browsing history, Valve co-founder Gabe Newell replied that it isn't the case. Newell broached the subject on his own Reddit thread to provide an explanation of how VAC works in order to refute these claims.

Newell brought up the topic of cheat developers who, according to Newell, have difficulty in getting users to pay them. This has resulted in cheat developers programming DRM and anti-cheat codes for their product creations in order to get paid. To do this, however, the cheat program will send out a call to a DRM server in order to authenticate whether or not it was actually paid for. 

What VAC does, Newell said, is check "for the presence of such cheats." He explained, "If they were detected VAC then checked to see which cheat DRM server was being contacted. This second check was done by looking for a partial match to those (non-web) cheat DRM servers in the DNS cache. If found, then hashes of the matching DNS entries were sent to the VAC servers. The match was double checked on our servers and then that client was marked for a future ban. Less than a tenth of one percent of clients triggered the second check. 570 cheaters are being banned as a result."

CSGO

For Valve, trust is an important part of the multiplayer community and, according to Newell, "Cheat versus trust is an ongoing cat-and-mouse game. New cheats are created all the time, detected, banned, and tweaked. This specific VAC test for this specific round of cheats was effective for 13 days, which is fairly typical. It is now no longer active as the cheat providers have worked around it by manipulating the DNS cache of their customers' client machines."

Because kernel-level cheats are expensive to create, Valve's goal, Newell said, "is to make them (cheats) more expensive for cheaters and cheat creators than the economic benefits they can reasonably expect to gain."

Newell went on to explain that the accusations made against Valve are a form of attack from cheat developers hoping to cause mistrust between Valve and its consumers. He ended his post saying, "Our response is to make it clear what we were actually doing and why with enough transparency that people can make their own judgments as to whether or not we are trustworthy."

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Asus Finally Rolls Out a Firmware Fix for Major Router Vulnerability

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 12:43 PM PST

Asus RT-N66UIt took Asus eight months to address a security flaw in some of its routers

If you own an Asus-brand router, do yourself a favor and check to see if there's a firmware update available. Depending on which model you own, you could be susceptible to an eight-month security flaw that could potentially allow a remote hacker to access your hard drives. A recent firmware release is supposed to plug up the security hole, it's just a shame it took Asus so long to address the issue. So, what happened?

Back in June of last year, security researcher John Lovett posted details of the vulnerability on his SecurityFocus website. What he found was that hackers were able to "traverse to any external storage plugged in through the USB ports on the back of" select routers. He was specifically referring to the popular RT-N66U, but the vulnerability is present on other models as well. Lovett only went public with the info after contacting Asus two weeks prior and receiving a response that "it was not an issue."

An Ars Technica reader recently found out the hard way that the vulnerability is an issue. As he was browsing the contents of his external hard drive, he came upon a text file with a warning message.

"This is an automated message being sent out to everyone affected. Your Asus router (and your documents) can be accessed by anyone in the world with an Internet connection. You need to protect yourself and learn more by reading the following news article: http://nullfluid.com/asusgate.txt," the message read.

In July of last year, Lovett posted additional details about the security flaw.

"The vulnerability is that on many, if not on almost all N66U units that have enabled https Web service access via the AiCloud feature, [they] are vulnerable to un-authenticated directory traversal and full sensitive file disclosure," Lovett explained. "Any of the AiCloud options 'Cloud Disk,' 'Smart Access,' and 'Smart Sync' (need another verification on this one) appear to enable this vulnerability."

According to Lovett, affected models include the RT-AC66R, RT-AC66U, RT-N66R, RT-AC56U, RT-N56R, RT-N14U, RT-N15, and RT-N16R. That's a lot of router models, though a recent firmware update is supposed to have fixed the issue. Better late than never, right?

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Intel's Xeon E7 v2 Family Targets Mission Critical Computing

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 12:12 PM PST

Intel Xeon E7 v2New workstation processor is a data hog

Intel today announced its Xeon E7 v2 line of processors featuring the industry's largest memory support (1.5TB per socket versus 1TB per socket delivered by alternative architectures), which enables the chips to rapidly analyze large data sets and deliver real-time insights based on a vast amount of diverse data. The processors are intended for mission critical computing chores.

"Organizations that leverage data to accelerate business insights will have a tremendous edge in this economy," said Diane Bryant, senior vice president and general manager of Intel's Data Center Group. "The advanced performance, memory capacity and reliability of the Intel Xeon processor E7 v2 family enable IT organizations to deliver real-time analysis of large data sets to spot and capitalize on trends, create new services and deliver business efficiency."

A motivating factor for Intel in developing this new line of processors is the "immense amount of data" that's coming from a growing number of connected devices making up the "Internet of Things" (IOT). The Xeon E7 v2 line will make it possible for companies to analyze all that data and receive real-time results from large data sets. The embedded video below offers a look at how this can come in handy:

This is the first new version of Xeon in three years. It's designed to support up to 32-socket servers with configurations of up to 15 processing cores. Nearly two dozen hardware partners have already signed up to support the platform.

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Ken Levine Disbands Irrational Games, Studio Behind BioShock

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 11:43 AM PST

BioShock InfiniteTurn out the lights, the party's over

Talk about a (Bio)shock to the system -- Irrational Games, the studio responsible for the BioShock series, is officially closing up shop after close to two decades of game development. Co-founder Ken Levine delivered the sad news to the gaming community in a blog post today, saying he's at a point where he needs to refocus his energy on a smaller team with a more direct relationship with gamers.

Irrational Games' parent company 2K Games, which is a subsidiary of Take-Two Interactive, is disbanding the team, save for around 15 people. The original team's last effort will be a DLC pack for BioShock Infinite that's about to be rolled out. Beyond that, the future of the BioShock series will be in the hands of 2K Games.

"I am winding down Irrational Games as you know it. I'll be starting a smaller, more entrepreneurial endeavor at Take-Two. That is going to mean parting ways with all but about fifteen members of the Irrational team," Levine said today. "There's no great way to lay people off, and our first concern is to make sure that the people who are leaving have as much support as we can give them during this transition."

Levine said he originally planned on going the "classical startup" route. However, Take-Two said it was willing to fund his venture and convinced him to stay within its walls.

"If we're lucky, we'll build something half as memorable as BioShock," Levine said.

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Build a PC: Recommended Builds (February 2014)

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 10:36 AM PST

Budget, baseline, and performance PC builds!

What time is it? It's time to Build a PC with our Blueprints! This month, we've built three rigs at three approximate price points: Budget, Baseline, Performance. Budget is an entry-level rig with pep, Baseline gets you a powerful system for gaming and content creation at 1080p, and Performance beefs everything up across the board. These rigs are lab-tested and editor-approved. As an added bonus, we've also collected several of our Upgrades of the Month from past issues, for your shopping perusal.

We're also doing something a little different this month, with pretty tables with things you can click on and stuff. Prices listed here reflect print time and may not match the ones you find elsewhere online. In addition, Newegg has jumped on board to offer packaged deals for each of the builds below in an attempt to offer a better overall value. To see these bundle prices, click the "Buy-or-get-more-info-at-Newegg" button at the bottom of each build. Feedback is welcome. Tell us what you think!

Budget

NZXT Source 210 Elite

Ingredients
Part Component Price
Case NZXT Source 210 Elite $50
PSU Corsair CX500 500W $50
Mobo GIGABYTE GA-970A-D3P ATX $85
CPU AMD FX-6300 $120
Cooler Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO $40
GPU MSI N660 TF 2GD5/OC GeForce GTX 660 2GB $210
RAM 2x 4GB G.Skill Ripjaws F3-10666CL9D-8GBXL $80
Optical Drive None  
SSD Kingston HyperX 120GB SH103S3/120G $130
HDD Seagate Barracuda 1TB ST1000DM003 $65
Total = $830
Click here to see the live bundle price:  buy online at newegg

 

AMD'S FX-6300 CPU retains a high price-to-performance value, so that part of our build does not change from our previous set of Blueprint builds. The Gigabyte motherboard is a solid performer. We did swap some other parts though, since RAM prices keep creeping up, and the Radeon HD 7850 video card has been officially retired. We switched our RAM to G.Skill 1333MHz sticks and ditched the HD 7850 for an MSI GTX 660; it's more expensive, but AMD's alternatives have been experiencing some price volatility lately. We also had to drop the optical drive to keep the price steady. The PC Power and Cooling PSU we used last time is no longer on sale, but this Corsair CX500 unit has a good rep.

 

Corsair Vengeance C70 case

Ingredients
Part Component Price
Case Corsair Vengeance C70 $110
PSU Thermaltake SP-750M 750W $90
Mobo Gigabyte G1.Sniper Z87 $175
CPU Intel Core i5-4670K $227
Cooler Cooler Master Hyper 212 Evo $35
GPU EVGA GeForce GTX 760 02G-P4-2765-KR $250 
RAM 2x 4GB G.Skill Ripjaws F3-12800CL9D-8GBXL $70
Optical Drive Samsung SH-224DB/BEBE DVD Burner $20
SSD Crucial M500 240GB $150
HDD Seagate Barracuda 1TB ST1000DM003 $65
TOTAL = $1192
Click here to see the live bundle price:  buy online at newegg

 

Intel reigns supreme at the enthusiast level, so we're sticking with the Core i5-4670K, which has a great balance of price and all-around performance. (The Core i7-4770K mostly just adds Hyper-Threading, so we couldn't justify the extra $100 or so.)  The Gigabyte Z87X-UD3H board we used before has gone up in price while the G1.Sniper Z87 has come down, so we switched since it has better onboard sound and is easier to overclock. (You can check out a build that uses the the Z77 version of the UD3H here.) We are still using a GTX 760, because it's in the sweet spot of price and performance, and great for 1080p gaming. We switched the PSU from the 750W NZXT HALE82 to shave off a few bucks, and Thermaltake's "Smart M" series power supplies are great, so we're happy to have one powering our baseline build.

 

Performance

NZXT Phantom 530 case

Ingredients
Part Component Price
Case NZXT Phantom 530 $130
PSU Seasonic M12II 850W $110
Mobo Asus Sabertooth X79 $320
CPU Intel Core i7-4820K $325
Cooler Corsair Hydro H100i $110
GPU EVGA GeForce GTX 780 Ti 03G-P4-2884-KR $700
RAM 4x 4GB Corsair Vengeance CMZ16GX3M4X1600C9 $190
Optical Drive Asus BW-12B1ST $60
SSD Samsung 840 Evo 500GB MZ-7TE500BW $325
HDD Seagate Barracuda 3TB STBD3000100 $110
TOTAL = $2380
Click here to see the live bundle price:  buy online at newegg

 

We ordinarily reserve 240mm/280mm liquid-cooling for our Ultra build, but expandable loops like the Cooler Master Glacer 240L and the Swiftech H220X are starting to create an all-new super- high-end tier. So, we've upgraded from our 120mm Corsair Hydro H80i to the 240mm H100i. It's more appropriate for a $2,500-range PC, anyway. The difference in performance won't be huge, but the larger radiator of the H100i should allow for slower fan speeds and a quieter experience.

We could upgrade the CPU to a Core i7-4930K, which has two more cores than the i7-4820K we're using, but we can't justify the extra $250. You may feel differently if you regularly use workstation apps that benefit from a lot of CPU threads, like HD video encoding, and we may feel differently when Intel drops its eight-core Haswell-E CPUs toward the end of the year.

The Radeon R9 290X would be a great alternative to the GeForce GTX 780 Ti, since it's almost as fast and has a list price that's $150 lower. But the street price for the 290X has ended up much higher than expected, making the 780 Ti a better buy for the money. If you don't want to drop $700 on a video card, the regular GTX 780 at about $500 is a fine alternative.

Upgrades of the Month

Ingredients
Part Component Price
CPU Cooler Cooler Master Glacer 240L $140
Cables Silverstone CP11 Thin SATA Cables $10
Keyboard Corsair Vengeance K95 $150
Flash Drive Sandisk Extreme 64GB USB 3.0 $75
TOTAL:  $375

For the past several months, our Blueprints section at the back of each issue has included an Upgrade of the Month, which is kind of like our Best of the Best, but with less stringent requirements. It doesn't have to be a hardware component, or something that we've reviewed. The Sandisk Extreme flash drive, for example, is just an accessory. And we wouldn't review the Silverstone CP11 cables, as useful as they are. (And note that these are about 12 inches long, rather than the standard 18 inches). Corsair also makes a range of nice mechanical keyboards, in addition to the K95.

If you want a Corsair keyboard without the set of macro keys, the Vengeance K70 may be more your speed. Cooler Master also makes some nice mechanical keyboards, such as the CM Storm QuickFire Pro.

Boutique System Builders Quick to Pounce on Nvidia's New Graphics Cards

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 10:19 AM PST

Nvidia GeForce GTX 750Gaming PC builders get behind Nvidia's new GPU launches

If you were worried that Nvidia's newly announced graphics cards would amount to a paper launch, don't be. Boutique system builders have already armed themselves with the new GPUs -- GeForce GTX 750, GeForce GTX 750 Ti, and GeForce GTX Titan Black -- and are chomping (or "champing," if you prefer) at the bit to build your next gaming PC using Nvidia's newest hardware.

Going in alphabetical order, AVADirect announced it has all three GPUs on hand, which are options in several of the company's desktops, including its line of silent PCs. Systems range in price from under $1,000 to north of $3,000 (such as a liquid cooled gaming rig running a GeForce Titan Black), depending on configuration.

Next up is CyberPowerPC, which is offering the trio of Nvidia GPUs in a variety of gaming lines. Systems featuring the GeForce GTX 750 start at $649, while rigs equipped with a GeForce GTX 750 Ti or GeForce GTX Titan Black start out at $699 and $1,749, respectively.

Digital Storm is also on board with the new GPUs and is particularly excited about its Aventum II system, which can push 4K Ultra HD gaming and video with the GeForce GTX Titan Black.

"HD gaming is the new standard and Ultra HD is not far behind with 4K displays already available for $800," said Rajeev Kuruppu, Digital Storm's Director of Product Development. "This is an exciting time for gamers and we're thrilled to incorporate NVIDIA's new cards into our systems to deliver the stunning graphics and advanced gaming experience our customers demand."

You can also find these new GPUs in Digital Storm's Bolt II, a liquid-cooled "Steam Machine" hybrid running both Steam OS and Windows.

Moving along, Origin PC is offering Nvidia's three new graphics cards in its Chronos, Millennium, and Genesis desktops. If you want to take the 'money is no object' approach, you can configure a Genesis system with four GeForce Titan Black cards in quad-SLI. The cards alone will set you back over $4,500, but rest assured, it will run Crysis.

Finally, Velocity Micro dropped us a note to let us know it too has its hands on all three GPU options, which it's offering in select gaming and workstation desktops. Configurations with the GTX 750 start at $829 while systems with the GTX Titan Black start at $2,999.

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Don't Bother Asus with Silly 'Death of the Desktop' Talk

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 09:41 AM PST

Asus DesktopAsus is doubling down its gamble on desktop PCs

If you trot into your local Best Buy store, you're likely to see way more tablets, laptops, and hybrid PCs than actual desktops even though the opposite was true not all that long ago. However, if you make a living writing obituaries, don't include desktop PCs in any upcoming columns, they're still very much relevant. One need only ask Asus, which is reportedly planning to ship twice as many desktops this year as it did in 2013.

Asus is far from the biggest desktop player in the world, however it's pretty interesting that it expects to ship 4 million desktop PCs in 2014, up from 2 million in 2013. Company president Jerry Shen said as much, noting that China will be a key target, along with focusing on enterprise clients, Digitimes reports.

This could be another sign that the PC market is beginning to stabilize. In November, Gartner said it expected combined desktop, notebook, and ultramobile shipments to remain flat in 2014 with 321.4 million unit shipments. Previously, double-digit declines were the norm.

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Newegg Daily Deals: Seasonic 760W 80 Plus Platinum Modular PSU, Seagate 4TB HDD, and More!

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 09:05 AM PST

Seasonic PSUnewegg logo

Top Deal:

Do you know what Aerosmith, Johnny Cash, Elvis Presley, and Frank Sinatra all have in common? They've all gone Platinum! You can too, if you pick out the right power supply. If you want to be able to tell your family and friends you've finally gone Platinum, then check out today's top deal for a Seasonic 760W 80 Plus Platinum Modular Power Supply for $100 with free shipping (normally $155 - use coupon code: [EMCYTZT5732]). This is a fully modular unit with a silent fan control switch, durable Japanese Grade A capacitors, a single +12V rail (63A), and of course 80 Plus Platinum certification.

Other Deals:

Seagate 4TB 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5-inch Hard Drive for $150 with free shipping (normally $165 - use coupon code: [EMCYTZT5736])

Samsung 23-inch 5ms HDMI Widescreen LED Backlight LCD Monitor for $130 with free shipping (normally $140 - use coupon code: [EMCYTZT5729])

Antec Nine Hundred ATX Mid Tower Computer Case with USB 3.0 for $80 with free shipping (normally $100; additional $20 Mail-in rebate)

Antec Kuhler H2O 650 Water/Liquid CPU Cooler 120MM for $50 with free shipping (normally $70; additional $20 Mail-in rebate)

Nvidia GTX 750 Ti Benchmarks

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 06:37 AM PST

Nvidia Unveils the Maxell-powered GTX 750 Ti

GTX 750 TiToday Nvidia is pulling the wraps off its all-new Maxwell architecture, which has one defining feature -- it's twice as efficient as Kepler. Instead of launching with a high-end $500 GPU like it's done in the past though, this time it's going the opposite direction by launching at the entry level with the promise that it will eventually release 200w+ TDP cards based on Maxwell. For now this is the new low-power king at the $150 price point with its rock-bottom TDP of just 60w and the ability to pull all the juice it needs from a PCIe connector, no six-pin power connector required. Let's take a look at what Maxwell is all about, and how the card fares against its rival from the red team.

Maxwell Debuts

Right off the bat let's clear up two things about Maxwell. First, it is using the same 28nm process that Nvidia used for Kepler instead of 22nm like everyone thought. Second, though there has been a lot of discussion online (and even from us) about how Maxwell would be the first GPU to have an embedded ARM CPU, that is not happening on the desktop cards as far as we can tell, so we were wrong about that, along with everyone else. It now appears that all that talk about Maxwell having an integrated ARM core was simply wrong, or maybe it was just the next-gen Tegra part named K1, which has a Kepler core and an ARM CPU.

Now that we know what Maxwell isn't, let's talk about what it is, which is a radically redesigned architecture that makes Kepler look like a fire breathing dragon. The chip inside the GTX 750 Ti is named GM107, and according to Nvidia it was designed, "for use in power-limited environments like notebooks and small form factor PCs." Nvidia is targeting very small Steam Machines with the GTX 750 Ti as well. Nvidia notes that the first-generation Maxwell products will be focused on low power operation, with "higher performing second generation Maxwell GPUs addressing the enthusiast graphics segments at a later date."

Nvidia claims as it transitioned Kepler into a mobile part it had to make a lot of changes to the architecture to save power, and that all that knowledge went into Maxwell. It has completely revamped the structure of the chip with specific attention paid to the arrangement and management of the CUDA cores. The SMX design from Kepler is gone, replaced by a new structure named SM for Streaming Multiprocessor. According to Nvidia, the improvements are mainly in "control logic partitioning, workload balancing, clock-gating granularity, compiler-based scheduling, and number of instructions issued per clock cycle" as well as other enhancements. These changes allow Nvidia to use more SM units in general but each of them have fewer CUDA cores (more on this in a bit). The result is that a chip like GM107 ships with five SMs compared to two in the GK107 chip used in the GTX 650 it replaces.

 

GM107

The GM107 compared to Kepler's GK107 - more power, with less power.

One other big change in Maxwell has a fat 2MB of L2 cache compared to just 256KB in GK107. Nvidia says the extra cache reduces the amount of requests sent to the graphics card memory, which conserves energy. Overall, the GM107 contains a single Graphics Processing Cluster (GPC), which includes five SM units for a total of 640 CUDA cores, and two 64-bit memory controllers for a 128-bit bus.

Maxwell SMs

The biggest change in Maxwell is of course the redesigned Streaming Multiprocessor units. Intead of having 192 CUDA cores per unit with one piece of control logic for all of them, the new design has each SM partitioned into four distinct processing blocks with each one having its own control logic. Each partitioned block hosts 32 CUDA cores, so with four blocks per unit the total CUDA cores is 128 per block, and Nvidia claims this approach allows for 35 percent more performance per CUDA core on workloads that are limited by shader performance. Pairs of these blocks share texture filtering units and cache, thereby saving space and power. Overall, the smaller blocks deliver 90 percent of a Kepler SMX unit while taking up much less space, allowing Nvidia to put more of them on the GPU. Since each block's control logic has to only deal with 32 CUDA cores instead of 192 in Kepler, it makes their job simpler and more efficient. As we noted previously, it has placed five of them in the GM107 compared with just two in the previous chip, allowing it to utilize 1.7 times more CUDA cores and thus over 200 percent more shader performance. It basically boils down to less cores being used equals less power consumed, but since the design is more efficient performance is also improved.

 

GM107 Block

Maxwell's SM units feature four "processing blocks" per unit, with four partitions of 32 CUDA cores each.

Continue reading for a closer look at the card, benchmarks, and closing thoughts.

 



 

The GTX 750 Ti

To recap briefly, the GPU at the heart of this card goes by the call-sign GM107 and it is a full implementation with 640 CUDA cores, dual 64-bit memory controllers for a 128-bit wide bus, and 1GB or 2GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at 5.4GHz. The 750 Ti includes the same GPU Boost 2.0 technology found in the GTX 700 series of cards, so it'll automatically overclock itself under load despite having surprisingly high stock clocks of 1,020MHz base clock and a 1,085MHz boost clock. Nvidia says the card can easily do 1,250MHz as well. Nvidia's add-in-board partners will also be offering the usual overclocked versions of the card too. The card slides in right above the GTX 650 in Nvidia's product stack, replacing the GTX 650 Ti, and is one notch below the GTX 660.

 

GTX 750 Ti

Despite its entry-level nature, the GTX 750 Ti supports ShadowPlay and G-Sync.

The big "talking point" of this card is its lack of six-pin PCIe power connector, though the back of the board has solder points for such a connector in case an add-in-board partner wants to put one there, but the reference design is completely bereft of a connector. This translates to the ability to stick it into any PC on the market with a PCI Express slot. Nvidia points out in the press materials this card is meant to be wedged into almost any PC out there, including small form factor boxes, Steam Machines, and even older desktops that are using integrated graphics. The card's TDP is a mere 60w, which is easily the lowest of any GTX card we've ever seen. Nvidia's minimum power supply requirement for this card is just 300w, and it notes that the PCIe slot delivers 75w, so this card isn't even using all of the power the slot can provide. In general, the GTX 750 Ti's mission in life is to replace integrated graphics on older PCs, so it'll slide right into the millions of Dell, HP, and Lenovo desktops that ship with integrated graphics and provide very good 1080p gaming at a decent price.

It's also an entry-level GTX card from Nvidia, so you get access to everything in the ecosystem including Gamestream for your Shield, GeForce Experience, Shadowplay, G-sync, and the GPU's ability to overclock care of GPU Boost 2.0. It does not support SLI, however. Its connectors include two dual-link DVI connectors and one HDMI connector, and like most GPUs it is a dual-slot card. Here are the full specs straight from the green horse's mouth:

 

GTX 750 Ti Specs

Full specs of the GTX 750 Ti

1080p Benchmarks

Before we show you the benchmarks, let us be clear about one thing, which is we only had time to test it against its direct competitor, which is the AMD R7 260X. In Nvidia's briefing documents this is/was the card they are/were targeting, and we use the past tense because last Thursday AMD announced the R7 265 in an offensive maneuver to fend off the attack from this very GPU. While doing so, AMD also dropped the price on the R7 260X down to just $120. Nvidia is also launching a non-Ti version of the GTX 750 with the same name for the exact same price of $120. It ships with the same clock speeds as the GTX 750 Ti but has less shader performance due to less CUDA cores via one less SM unit, and a slightly lower memory clock (5GHz vs. 5.4GHz on the Ti). We do not have the GTX 750 nor do we have the R7 265 for review, so we compared the GTX 750 Ti to its closest competitor. We are rounding up all these cards however for a mega-shootout in an upcoming issue, so stay tuned. With that disclaimer out of the way, here are the numbers:

1080p Benchmarks

GTX 750 Ti Benchmarks

Best scores are bolded. Our test bed is a 3.3GHz Intel Core i7-3960X Extreme Edition in an Asus Rampage Extreme IV motherboard with 16GB of DDR3/1600 memory and a Thermaltake ToughPower 1,050w PSU. The OS is Windows 8 64-bit Enterprise. All games run at 1920x1080 with maximum settings and 4X AA except for 3DMark.

 

Final Thoughts

Looking at the benchmark chart there's one piece of information that is missing which puts these numbers in a whole new light. The AMD R7 260X has a TDP of 115w, and the Maxwell card is just 60w. We know that "energy efficiency" isn't the most titillating spec or feature here at Maximum PC, but we give this card big props for being able to hold its own against a card with double the power rating. That is impressive. However, since AMD has launched a new GPU specifically to attack this card, and we don't have that card to benchmark yet (the R7 265), this battle is far from over. Also, the AMD card has a TDP of 150 watts, so it's more than double that of the Maxwell-based GTX 750 Ti.

Given their differences in power consumption it's almost fair to say these cards aren't even playing in the same league as Nvidia is targeting PCs without any PCIe power connectors, and AMD is targeting value-conscious gamers that are looking to upgrade from a much older 1080p GPU.

Now, as a reader of Maximum PC you might not be too stoked on a card designed for "low power environments," and we feel you. This is how Nvidia is handling it right now though, as the $100-$150 is the lion's share of the GPU market globally. Plus, it already has a handle on the high-end of the market with the GTX 780 Ti, and the all-new Titan Black. Also, AMD's pricing and supply issues are only strengthening its hand as well in both the high-end and the mid-range too. That leaves just one area for it to really sock it to AMD, and it's chosen the low-power route. It's tantalizing to consider what a flagship GM110 GPU might be capable of though, but sadly we won't see it until probably Q4 based on an estimate we have pulled from our nether regions.

All in all, the Maxwell-based GTX 750 Ti certainly delivers on the promise of being more efficient than Kepler, which is good news for gamers who like quiet machines and bad news for AMD and its power-hungry GCN architecture. Whether or not that will factor into peoples' purchasing decisions remains to be seen but Nvidia clearly has the performance-per-watt lead with Maxwell, and we can't wait to see it introduce more powerful GPUs using the same architecture. Also, it's worth noting that despite its power-sipping status we were able to overclock the card all the way up to 1,272MHz on stock voltage, and under load it ran at 67 C.

The GTX 750 Ti 2GB version will sell for $150, with the GTX 750 (we assume also with 2GB) selling for $120. Retailers will also be selling 1GB versions of the GTX 750 Ti for $140 later this month.

Nvidia is Ready to Rumble with GeForce GTX Titan Black Graphics Card

Posted: 18 Feb 2014 06:06 AM PST

Nvidia GeForce GTX Titan BlackNew graphics card from Nvidia wields a full GK110 GPU

What do you get if you take a GeForce GTX 780 Ti graphics card and give it a shot of adrenaline? You end up with Nvidia's GeForce GTX Titan Black, a new graphics card with full CUDA support and double precision floating-point compute performance. In other words, it comes out swinging with a fully equipped 28nm GK110 GPU without any arbitrary restrictions. Intrigued? Let's have a look at some other specs.

The GeForce GTX Titan Black is a beast with 2,880 single precision CUDA cores, 960 double-precision CUDA cores, 240 texture units, and 48 ROP units. It has a base clockspeed of 889MHz and a boost clockspeed of 980MHz, along with 6GB of GDDR5 memory clocked at 7,000MHz (effective) on a 384-bit bus. This gives the Titan Black 336GB/s of total memory bandwidth and a texture filtering rate of 213.4GT/s.

Though the card is called Titan Black, it doesn't feature an all-black heatspreader as previously rumored. Instead, it looks similar to the standard Titan except that the alumimum fins and some accents around the fan have been painted black, as well as the Titan lettering. Here's a look at it with the heatsink shroud removed:

Nvidia GeForce GTX Titan Black Opened

Look for the GeForce GTX Titan Black to sell for around $999, a familiar price for a flagship GPU.

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