FiringSquad: Home of the Hardcore Gamer - Games, Hardware, Reviews and NewsSubmit your own or view users' CPU overclocking results!

  
 Home   News   THE MATRIX   Deals   Hardware   Games   Features   Media   Products   Forums   FS China 
AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Home : Hardware : Video Cards : Mainstream Video Quality Shootout: ATI vs NVIDIA & XGI
» Join the Greatest Gaming Community NOW! (It's free)

Already a member? Login
 


Random Gallery >> 
Click to view high-res Image!
Left 4 Dead 2 Dark Carnival Screenshots PAX 09 [6] (0)

Clive Barker's Jericho Review (Round 2) (6) by jacobvandy
SHOCK & Awwwwww (1) by PS2Fish
Guitar Hero 3 - The thing that should not be (UPDATED) (5) by Beefysworld
So what if it doesn't follow the topic? (0) by ICDP
Afghanistan and Iraq (0) by anastamoses@gmail.com
War! Huh! Yeah! (aka Blatant Plagiarism) (1) by ICDP
Never fallen (0) by froggz
My eVGA ride (0) by devit
Guide to Overclocking: OC Juice and Overclocking Your Way to Become a Better Person (2) by jarrodthome
"I need a vacation..." (4) by ICDP

More Blogs >>




Mainstream Video Quality Shootout: ATI vs NVIDIA & XGI
December 06, 2005   Alan Dang > [View My Other Articles]
Product Info | User Reviews | Article Images(24) | Image Gallery | Comments | Forum Thread
Introduction


Although Blu-Ray and HD-DVD are on the way, DVD videos remain the primary method of watching movies. Companies like NVIDIA and ATI have made video quality a key feature in their next generation products. It used to be that things like MPEG-2 acceleration would be described in just a bullet point, but now we have ATI AVIVO, NVIDIA PureVideo, and XGI TrueVideo. In this article, I will be using the HQV Benchmark DVD to evaluate mainstream GPUs: the ATI Radeon X800 XL ($270), the GeForce 6600GT ($170), and the XGI Volari 8300 (esp $50). As you can see from the difference in pricing, by mainstream, we're just talking about a GPU that's not a GeForce 7800 or Radeon X1800.

You may want to review this interview with NVIDIA, and this interview with ATI before we begin. We have reprinted the relevant parts of the text from our first look at DVD deinterlacing.

Since we're just doing mainstream, I'll be using the HQV Benchmark DVD for my primary source. All of the tests were conducted using a 1280x1024 DVI connection. Since the DVD software plays a large role in video quality, we used the "best available" software for each platform. This meant NVIDIA PureVideo decoder for the GeForce, Cyberlink PowerDVD for the XGI, and ATI's own Multimedia Center (based off Cyberlink) for the Radeon. All of the GPUs were configured for the auto-detect mode. Forceware 81.95, Catalyst 5.12, and Reactor 3.03.03 drivers were used.

The screenshots we have used were taken with the Epiphan VGA2USB. Since we're doing a true analog capture of image quality, please be aware that differences in brightness, color, contrast, or even aspect ratio are a fault of the capture device and that the images are only designed to provide examples to go along with the text. Make sure you view the HIGH-RES version of each of the images. Feel free to post any questions in our comments section if it's unclear whether there's a difference between image quality or if it's simply an artifact from the way we captured the video.



    Detection of non-moving objects Next!
Blog + Share: Digg Del.icio.us Reddit SU furl • More: AddThis Social Bookmark Button
Send This Article to a Friend!  
Table of Contents
  Print Entire Article  

MATRIX CONTENT » RANDOM MEDIA BLOG More Blogs >>
No ratings yet
» Please rate this
I am an AMD AgentRead this Media-Blog entry!» First Entry (1)
by Skippy989 (78) Talk with this user on their Shout Box (My other blogs) Posted 7 months ago


 Latest Headlines
Intel's 6-core Westmere CPU tested (0)
First Core i3/Core i5 Clarkdale prices hit web (0)
Atari announces open beta dates for Star Trek Online (4)
Modern Warfare 2 PC outsells Call of Duty 4 (9)
Left 4 Dead 2 PC Review (6)
Today's News >>
Today's Siteseeing >>


 Table of Contents


FiringSquad is powered by... Back to Top Site MapContact UsAdvertise With Us Privacy StatementAbout Us  
News RSSSiteseeing RSSArticle RSS   © 1998-2009 FS Media, Inc. All Rights Reserved