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| [Dec 29, 2012, 2:32 pm ET] - Share - Viewing Comments |
The Tech Report - Improving the PC as a gaming platform: the hardware.
The new spec would clearly involve some compromises, since you can't simply step up and demand that every new computer feature a Radeon 7970, 32GB of RAM, and a six-core CPU with Hyperthingamabobs. However, let's take a page from our own System Guide's Econobox. MPC-HD could set the bar at, say, a Radeon 7770 graphics card ($120 or so) and a Core i3-3220 processor (around $130). Those components provide solid gaming performance at 1080p in the vast majority of titles, even with anti-aliasing enabled. They would be a perfectly reasonable baseline to aim for—one that provides many times the horsepower of current-generations consoles.
Setting a baseline would make life easier for developers, as well. Let's imagine MPC-HD has multiple levels, and when publishing your game, you can simply state that the minimum requirement is MPC-HD Level 1. That's easy for developers to code for, easy for buyers to follow, and easy for manufacturers to advertise and profit from. One can only wish.
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Re: Op Ed |
Dec 30, 2012, 02:02 |
Jensen |
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Resellers love giving specs that are meaningless. I notice it with monitors:
Dynamic contrast ratio pixel response time (several ways to measure this) viewing angles (measuring method worthless) "HD" (all monitors are HD)
They rarely advertise specs that are important to me: lag, bit depth, panel type. |
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