The_Sniper_NM
Official EVGA Fanboy
+94|6382|SC | USA |
One of the major topics of discussion for the last two weeks was Nvidia preparing a driver codenamed "Big Bang II" for introduction in September. In case you didnt know, Nvidia's first driver for SLI came with "Big Bang I", so naturally people assumed that this must be something similar & significant, in case you didnt believe the codename.

Release 180 is the official name for Big Bang II driver. Among other features like DisplayPort support, OpenGL 3.0, GPU transcoding, Multi-monitor support for SLI, Nvidia is also preparing for optimizations that will help Nvidia be more competitive to the Radeon 4800 series. As far as we are aware of the performance optimizations are mainly geared towards the GTX 200 series with the 9800 series getting a much needed boost as well.

However one of the major features touted in the release is the support of PhysX processing on dedicated GPU. This will enable a Geforce 8 or 9 series card act as a Physics Processing Unit (PPU). This is remarkably similar to the ATI concept (before the merger) demoed at Computex 2006. ATI's demonstration used a X1600 as a dedicated PPU along with the X1900 for graphics processing. The performance improvements shown were significant. However, as Physics processing on GPU failed to take off and companies like AEGIA didnt do well selling their dedicated PPU, the concept never came to fruition. Nvidia picked up AEGIA in February this year and will be bringing this concept back to life very shortly.

The scenario would be simple; a user with a 9600GT could simply upgrade to the 9800GTX+ and use the 9600GT as a dedicated PPU. You could also imagine a similar upgrade path from 9800GTX to a GTX280 or GTX280 SLI if you got the money for it. There are too many variables currently to say that a Geforce as a dedicated PPU would take off just like SLI four years ago (Note: SLI is still a niche product but none the less gives Nvidia a performance edge). The library of games listed on the PhysX website isnt as large as Havok and we havent yet seen the performance benefits.

In conclusion, the driver packs in quite a lot of useful (and much requested) features and performance improvements. Does it deserve the Big Bang codename? Its upto you to decide.

http://gpucafe.com/2008/07/nvidias-big- … s-concept/

Looks I'll have my dual monitors back, and be able to use my brothers old 8600GTS as a PPU.

Last edited by The_Sniper_NM (2008-07-30 01:50:41)

dtacs
say that 2 my face fucker not online
+126|6103|Australia
Oh god Physx what a grand failure that was...
https://battlelog-cdn.battlefield.com/public/profile/bf3/kit-icon-recon.png?v=3173239
AussieReaper
( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
+5,761|6421|what

Best news out of all of this is that the new driver comes with OpenGL 3.0 support.
https://i.imgur.com/maVpUMN.png
.Sup
be nice
+2,646|6722|The Twilight Zone
I think its gonna be more of a fart than big bang. But yeah, they should optimize their cards, I know their current cards are capable of more performance.
https://www.shrani.si/f/3H/7h/45GTw71U/untitled-1.png
Brasso
member
+1,549|6899

"Big Bang"?  I don't know...

My 8600GTS will get more worth now with the PPU thing though.  That's good news.
"people in ny have a general idea of how to drive. one of the pedals goes forward the other one prevents you from dying"
Nessie09
I "fix" things
+107|6938|The Netherlands
Imagine averyone buying a 8400GS for PPU purposes
The_Sniper_NM
Official EVGA Fanboy
+94|6382|SC | USA |

Nessie09 wrote:

Imagine averyone buying a 8400GS for PPU purposes
8400GS FTWBBQOMGPPULOL edition

I'm actually excited for this. Especially as I'm staring at a blank 17in screen to the left of my 22in. My brother has yet to order his new gfx.

Last edited by The_Sniper_NM (2008-07-30 10:20:29)

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