A motherboard that supports Sli will be able to support crossfire right?
I don't think nVidia makes their motherboards capable of scaling their worst competitor's cards...
The idea of any hi-fi system is to reproduce the source material as faithfully as possible, and to deliberately add distortion to everything you hear (due to amplifier deficiencies) because it sounds 'nice' is simply not high fidelity. If that is what you want to hear then there is no problem with that, but by adding so much additional material (by way of harmonics and intermodulation) you have a tailored sound system, not a hi-fi. - Rod Elliot, ESP
no
"people in ny have a general idea of how to drive. one of the pedals goes forward the other one prevents you from dying"
No. And not the other way round either.
SLI on NV chipset boards only. Crossfire on ATi/AMD, and Intel chipsets. However, the ability to do this is a function of PCI-e and the limitation is intentionally put in the drivers.
Last edited by Agent_Dung_Bomb (2008-04-18 19:01:56)
Well, the limitation is probably in the chipsets, rather than the drivers, but I believe you're basically right in that they could make chipsets that supported both.Agent_Dung_Bomb wrote:
SLI on NV chipset boards only. Crossfire on ATi/AMD, and Intel chipsets. However, the ability to do this is a function of PCI-e and the limitation is intentionally put in the drivers.