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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, 11:09 |
eRe4s3r |
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Why would anyone laugh? That nvidia numbers inferior cards higher than better cards is confusing as hell, and often the only reason I know about it, is that I googled a benchmark. especially when you don't want the most expensive card or the step-down version of the most expensive card, things get very confusing.
But maybe a global naming convention that names stuff according to performance, price and efficiency would be helpful. Imagine if all things made in this world would have a classification label that puts them in a relation to all other devices made so far. Yeah it would be insane to figure out specific fair ratings for each device but it could work.. if an AI does it. |
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