I was reading about your Tesla computer recently and it got me thinking.
S-3D after so long has finally found its home with the PC. No longer that awkward blue red stuff that left so many unimpressed at the theater, S-3D has finally found its medium.
For several years now anyone with a PC could experience something truly mind blowing but sadly most people don’t even know in exists or believe it is a joke without even trying it. S-3D is greatly ignored and in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative (however not entirely irrelevant) endeavors such as getting ones FPS to exceed far beyond what is visibly detectable and taking resolutions to extreme standards. Like beta was to VHS, like electric cars were to gasoline, and like nuclear power is to coal (yes, we still use a heck of a lot of coal) those who use S-3D are screaming with frustration.
Now, I know that as a company that produces GPUs, it is beneficial to keep the consumers always racing to have the best FPS and resolutions. I know you are a business. But let me ask, what kind of businessman would you like to be? A Tesla, or a J.P Morgan. As any Tesla fan knows, Tesla was using J.P Morgan’s cash to fund his experimentations with wireless power (something we still struggle with today) and when Morgan found out he cut the funding. It is believed that he did this because wireless power, if successful, would be free. And so, if the power was free, then he wouldn’t profit from this technology.
So there you have it, as legend goes, a fat rich man inhibited the endeavors of one of the most underappreciated men is history simply because he felt he needed more money and fatness.
Side note: ( On FPS and resolution) I personally see it as a one eyed man opting for a really great pare of glasses over a second eye.
Well, S-3D is in no danger of dieing. In several more years it will be the norm. The extreme gamers who once obsessed with FPS will now refer to anyone who doesn’t have S-3D as a “noob”, or what ever hip word is floating around at that time. May I suggest “Zwappnar”. They will be blissfully unaware that it has been around for years.
What makes me a bit frustrated is that when this happens, Nvidia will claim that it was a pioneer in bringing S-3D to the PC market. And indeed you are. However, your actions lately simply do not reflect that. As Edison is credited with bring light into our homes and cities, so too will you be credited with bringing us S-3D.
Of course it wasn’t Edison who did that. So now I must ask you; What kind of innovator do you want to be? An Edison? Or a Tesla.
But we are just talking video games so now I feel a bit stupid:)
I was reading about your Tesla computer recently and it got me thinking.
S-3D after so long has finally found its home with the PC. No longer that awkward blue red stuff that left so many unimpressed at the theater, S-3D has finally found its medium.
For several years now anyone with a PC could experience something truly mind blowing but sadly most people don’t even know in exists or believe it is a joke without even trying it. S-3D is greatly ignored and in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative (however not entirely irrelevant) endeavors such as getting ones FPS to exceed far beyond what is visibly detectable and taking resolutions to extreme standards. Like beta was to VHS, like electric cars were to gasoline, and like nuclear power is to coal (yes, we still use a heck of a lot of coal) those who use S-3D are screaming with frustration.
Now, I know that as a company that produces GPUs, it is beneficial to keep the consumers always racing to have the best FPS and resolutions. I know you are a business. But let me ask, what kind of businessman would you like to be? A Tesla, or a J.P Morgan. As any Tesla fan knows, Tesla was using J.P Morgan’s cash to fund his experimentations with wireless power (something we still struggle with today) and when Morgan found out he cut the funding. It is believed that he did this because wireless power, if successful, would be free. And so, if the power was free, then he wouldn’t profit from this technology.
So there you have it, as legend goes, a fat rich man inhibited the endeavors of one of the most underappreciated men is history simply because he felt he needed more money and fatness.
Side note: ( On FPS and resolution) I personally see it as a one eyed man opting for a really great pare of glasses over a second eye.
Well, S-3D is in no danger of dieing. In several more years it will be the norm. The extreme gamers who once obsessed with FPS will now refer to anyone who doesn’t have S-3D as a “noob”, or what ever hip word is floating around at that time. May I suggest “Zwappnar”. They will be blissfully unaware that it has been around for years.
What makes me a bit frustrated is that when this happens, Nvidia will claim that it was a pioneer in bringing S-3D to the PC market. And indeed you are. However, your actions lately simply do not reflect that. As Edison is credited with bring light into our homes and cities, so too will you be credited with bringing us S-3D.
Of course it wasn’t Edison who did that. So now I must ask you; What kind of innovator do you want to be? An Edison? Or a Tesla.
But we are just talking video games so now I feel a bit stupid:)
[quote name='RAGEdemon' date='Sep 19 2007, 11:02 AM']If you don't get it, i doubt the poor fellow is going to be bothered to break it down and baby feed it to you :)
[right][snapback]253052[/snapback][/right]
[/quote]
It's more a case of
"Does he even have a clue?"
to which group I might just add yourself.
_____________________
"I was reading about your Tesla computer recently and it got me thinking..."
Yeah - I always equate an HPC parallel processor with 3D graphics...
"... in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative (however not entirely irrelevant) endeavors such as getting ones FPS to exceed far beyond what is visibly detectable..."
It's not a matter of visual perception, but computational and positional physics. Try [url="http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=35212&view=findpost&p=195689"]this posting[/url] and [url="http://forums.slizone.com/index.php?s=&showtopic=7953&view=findpost&p=52029"]this follow-up[/url] to clue yourselves in...
The opening to the above statement
"S-3D is greatly ignored and in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative..."
Who's pushing S-3D out to the masses? The application and hardware people, or the driver people? Other than the occassional forum such as this, does anyone push S-3D to the public? Or do the people who think S-3D is the "next wave" think they will expand its use simply by complaining to a specific driver developer? Or just sit back and wait for it to happen?
Or is nVidia to be expected to buy up all of the hardware so they can go full-fledge Stereo?
[quote name='RAGEdemon' date='Sep 19 2007, 11:02 AM']If you don't get it, i doubt the poor fellow is going to be bothered to break it down and baby feed it to you :)
[snapback]253052[/snapback]
It's more a case of
"Does he even have a clue?"
to which group I might just add yourself.
_____________________
"I was reading about your Tesla computer recently and it got me thinking..."
Yeah - I always equate an HPC parallel processor with 3D graphics...
"... in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative (however not entirely irrelevant) endeavors such as getting ones FPS to exceed far beyond what is visibly detectable..."
It's not a matter of visual perception, but computational and positional physics. Try this posting and this follow-up to clue yourselves in...
The opening to the above statement
"S-3D is greatly ignored and in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative..."
Who's pushing S-3D out to the masses? The application and hardware people, or the driver people? Other than the occassional forum such as this, does anyone push S-3D to the public? Or do the people who think S-3D is the "next wave" think they will expand its use simply by complaining to a specific driver developer? Or just sit back and wait for it to happen?
Or is nVidia to be expected to buy up all of the hardware so they can go full-fledge Stereo?
Is his focus even on the right area?...
...jaafaman
"AIO": Intel Xeon E5-2690 v2 @ 103.2 MHz BCLK | ASUS X79-Deluxe | SwifTech Apogee Drive II Pump and Block | 120 mm + 240 mm Push-Pull | 64 GB G.Skill PC3-12800 @ 1924 MHz | NVIDIA RTX 2070 FE | LG 25UM56 UW Monitor | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (Windows 10 Pro x64 1809) | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (UserData) | 4x SanDisk 500 GB SSDs in Marvell SATA3 RAID0 (C:\Games) | 2x WD 250 GB SSDs and WD 3 TB RED HDD in Marvell HyperDuo RAID (Media) | 16 GB RAMDisk (Temp Files) | WD My Book Essentials 3 TB NAS (Archives) | LG BP50NB40 ODD | eVGA Supernova G+ 1000 W PSU | Cooler Master HAF-XB
"Gaming": Intel Xeon E5-1650 v2, Turbo 44x (5-6), 45x (3-4), 46x (1-2) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | SwifTech Apogee Drive II Pump and Block | 120 mm + 240 mm Push/Pull | 32 GB G.Skill PC3-12800 @ 1866 MHz | NVIDIA GTX 1080 FE | NVIDIA GTX 970 RE | Samsung U28E510 UHD | 2x PNY 480 GB SSDs in Intel SATA3 RAID0 (OS) | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (Disk Games) | 4x PNY 240 GB SSDs in Intel SATA2 RAID0 (On-Line Games) | eVGA Supernova G+ 1000 W PSU | Cooler Master HAF-XB | Windows 10 Pro x64 1809
The posting gentleman is talking about philosophy from the perspective of a scientist, humorously comparing Tesla the [b]Scientist[/b]'s accomplishments with nvidia's.
Upon reading your above post, I would think to suggest reading his original post again as it clearly flew clear over your head.
And isn't it amazing how a small poke just in the right spot can extract such a marvelously entertaining response ^_^
The posting gentleman is talking about philosophy from the perspective of a scientist, humorously comparing Tesla the Scientist's accomplishments with nvidia's.
Upon reading your above post, I would think to suggest reading his original post again as it clearly flew clear over your head.
And isn't it amazing how a small poke just in the right spot can extract such a marvelously entertaining response ^_^
Windows 10 64-bit, Intel 7700K @ 5.1GHz, 16GB 3600MHz CL15 DDR4 RAM, 2x GTX 1080 SLI, Asus Maximus IX Hero, Sound Blaster ZxR, PCIe Quad SSD, Oculus Rift CV1, DLP Link PGD-150 glasses, ViewSonic PJD6531w 3D DLP Projector @ 1280x800 120Hz native / 2560x1600 120Hz DSR 3D Gaming.
[quote name='RAGEdemon' date='Sep 19 2007, 07:44 PM']...humorously comparing Tesla the [b]Scientist[/b]'s accomplishments with nvidia's.
Upon reading your above post, I would think to suggest reading his original post again as it clearly flew clear over your head.
[/quote]
Quite right - I'm too dense to see this as other than a dig, and a dry one at that.
[quote]...And isn't it amazing how a small poke just in the right spot can extract such a marvelously entertaining response ^_^
[/quote]
While you're busy drawing the dots for me to connect, here's another entertaining thought:
"If you cannot defeat a man's argument, do not worry. You can always call him names..."
...from an author I'm sure you will recognize - or are you more the Churchhill type?...
[quote name='RAGEdemon' date='Sep 19 2007, 09:05 PM']Whatever floats your boat mate. Run along now ^_^
[right][snapback]253339[/snapback][/right]
[/quote]
Nah -
I believe I'll just stick around until I find someone actually capable enough to answer my original question...
I’m sorry for any misunderstanding. Thank you for your support RAGEdemon. I’m glad I was able to get my ideas across to someone. It is my hope that Nvidia will listen too. I do however want to point out that it is not a “dig” and I think that is self evident.
It has nothing to do with the Tesla computer. I assumed that at least someone at Nvida must have some respect for Tesla simply because they named that system after him. The post was written to inspire any influential Tesla fans.
I’m sorry for any misunderstanding. Thank you for your support RAGEdemon. I’m glad I was able to get my ideas across to someone. It is my hope that Nvidia will listen too. I do however want to point out that it is not a “dig” and I think that is self evident.
It has nothing to do with the Tesla computer. I assumed that at least someone at Nvida must have some respect for Tesla simply because they named that system after him. The post was written to inspire any influential Tesla fans.
[quote name='genetic' date='Sep 20 2007, 01:57 AM']I’m sorry for any misunderstanding. Thank you for your support RAGEdemon. I’m glad I was able to get my ideas across to someone. It is my hope that Nvidia will listen too. I do however want to point out that it is not a “dig” and I think that is self evident.
It has nothing to do with the Tesla computer. I assumed that at least someone at Nvida must have some respect for Tesla simply because they named that system after him. The post was written to inspire any influential Tesla fans.
[right][snapback]253419[/snapback][/right]
[/quote]
And you, sir, have my public apology. As I said, I was too dense to pick up on the real message.
[quote name='genetic' date='Sep 20 2007, 01:57 AM']I’m sorry for any misunderstanding. Thank you for your support RAGEdemon. I’m glad I was able to get my ideas across to someone. It is my hope that Nvidia will listen too. I do however want to point out that it is not a “dig” and I think that is self evident.
It has nothing to do with the Tesla computer. I assumed that at least someone at Nvida must have some respect for Tesla simply because they named that system after him. The post was written to inspire any influential Tesla fans.
[snapback]253419[/snapback]
And you, sir, have my public apology. As I said, I was too dense to pick up on the real message.
I do appreciate having the question answered...
...jaafaman
"AIO": Intel Xeon E5-2690 v2 @ 103.2 MHz BCLK | ASUS X79-Deluxe | SwifTech Apogee Drive II Pump and Block | 120 mm + 240 mm Push-Pull | 64 GB G.Skill PC3-12800 @ 1924 MHz | NVIDIA RTX 2070 FE | LG 25UM56 UW Monitor | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (Windows 10 Pro x64 1809) | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (UserData) | 4x SanDisk 500 GB SSDs in Marvell SATA3 RAID0 (C:\Games) | 2x WD 250 GB SSDs and WD 3 TB RED HDD in Marvell HyperDuo RAID (Media) | 16 GB RAMDisk (Temp Files) | WD My Book Essentials 3 TB NAS (Archives) | LG BP50NB40 ODD | eVGA Supernova G+ 1000 W PSU | Cooler Master HAF-XB
"Gaming": Intel Xeon E5-1650 v2, Turbo 44x (5-6), 45x (3-4), 46x (1-2) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | SwifTech Apogee Drive II Pump and Block | 120 mm + 240 mm Push/Pull | 32 GB G.Skill PC3-12800 @ 1866 MHz | NVIDIA GTX 1080 FE | NVIDIA GTX 970 RE | Samsung U28E510 UHD | 2x PNY 480 GB SSDs in Intel SATA3 RAID0 (OS) | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (Disk Games) | 4x PNY 240 GB SSDs in Intel SATA2 RAID0 (On-Line Games) | eVGA Supernova G+ 1000 W PSU | Cooler Master HAF-XB | Windows 10 Pro x64 1809
I was reading about your Tesla computer recently and it got me thinking.
S-3D after so long has finally found its home with the PC. No longer that awkward blue red stuff that left so many unimpressed at the theater, S-3D has finally found its medium.
For several years now anyone with a PC could experience something truly mind blowing but sadly most people don’t even know in exists or believe it is a joke without even trying it. S-3D is greatly ignored and in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative (however not entirely irrelevant) endeavors such as getting ones FPS to exceed far beyond what is visibly detectable and taking resolutions to extreme standards. Like beta was to VHS, like electric cars were to gasoline, and like nuclear power is to coal (yes, we still use a heck of a lot of coal) those who use S-3D are screaming with frustration.
Now, I know that as a company that produces GPUs, it is beneficial to keep the consumers always racing to have the best FPS and resolutions. I know you are a business. But let me ask, what kind of businessman would you like to be? A Tesla, or a J.P Morgan. As any Tesla fan knows, Tesla was using J.P Morgan’s cash to fund his experimentations with wireless power (something we still struggle with today) and when Morgan found out he cut the funding. It is believed that he did this because wireless power, if successful, would be free. And so, if the power was free, then he wouldn’t profit from this technology.
So there you have it, as legend goes, a fat rich man inhibited the endeavors of one of the most underappreciated men is history simply because he felt he needed more money and fatness.
Side note: ( On FPS and resolution) I personally see it as a one eyed man opting for a really great pare of glasses over a second eye.
Well, S-3D is in no danger of dieing. In several more years it will be the norm. The extreme gamers who once obsessed with FPS will now refer to anyone who doesn’t have S-3D as a “noob”, or what ever hip word is floating around at that time. May I suggest “Zwappnar”. They will be blissfully unaware that it has been around for years.
What makes me a bit frustrated is that when this happens, Nvidia will claim that it was a pioneer in bringing S-3D to the PC market. And indeed you are. However, your actions lately simply do not reflect that. As Edison is credited with bring light into our homes and cities, so too will you be credited with bringing us S-3D.
Of course it wasn’t Edison who did that. So now I must ask you; What kind of innovator do you want to be? An Edison? Or a Tesla.
But we are just talking video games so now I feel a bit stupid:)
I was reading about your Tesla computer recently and it got me thinking.
S-3D after so long has finally found its home with the PC. No longer that awkward blue red stuff that left so many unimpressed at the theater, S-3D has finally found its medium.
For several years now anyone with a PC could experience something truly mind blowing but sadly most people don’t even know in exists or believe it is a joke without even trying it. S-3D is greatly ignored and in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative (however not entirely irrelevant) endeavors such as getting ones FPS to exceed far beyond what is visibly detectable and taking resolutions to extreme standards. Like beta was to VHS, like electric cars were to gasoline, and like nuclear power is to coal (yes, we still use a heck of a lot of coal) those who use S-3D are screaming with frustration.
Now, I know that as a company that produces GPUs, it is beneficial to keep the consumers always racing to have the best FPS and resolutions. I know you are a business. But let me ask, what kind of businessman would you like to be? A Tesla, or a J.P Morgan. As any Tesla fan knows, Tesla was using J.P Morgan’s cash to fund his experimentations with wireless power (something we still struggle with today) and when Morgan found out he cut the funding. It is believed that he did this because wireless power, if successful, would be free. And so, if the power was free, then he wouldn’t profit from this technology.
So there you have it, as legend goes, a fat rich man inhibited the endeavors of one of the most underappreciated men is history simply because he felt he needed more money and fatness.
Side note: ( On FPS and resolution) I personally see it as a one eyed man opting for a really great pare of glasses over a second eye.
Well, S-3D is in no danger of dieing. In several more years it will be the norm. The extreme gamers who once obsessed with FPS will now refer to anyone who doesn’t have S-3D as a “noob”, or what ever hip word is floating around at that time. May I suggest “Zwappnar”. They will be blissfully unaware that it has been around for years.
What makes me a bit frustrated is that when this happens, Nvidia will claim that it was a pioneer in bringing S-3D to the PC market. And indeed you are. However, your actions lately simply do not reflect that. As Edison is credited with bring light into our homes and cities, so too will you be credited with bringing us S-3D.
Of course it wasn’t Edison who did that. So now I must ask you; What kind of innovator do you want to be? An Edison? Or a Tesla.
But we are just talking video games so now I feel a bit stupid:)
...jaafaman
...jaafaman
"Gaming": Intel Xeon E5-1650 v2, Turbo 44x (5-6), 45x (3-4), 46x (1-2) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | SwifTech Apogee Drive II Pump and Block | 120 mm + 240 mm Push/Pull | 32 GB G.Skill PC3-12800 @ 1866 MHz | NVIDIA GTX 1080 FE | NVIDIA GTX 970 RE | Samsung U28E510 UHD | 2x PNY 480 GB SSDs in Intel SATA3 RAID0 (OS) | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (Disk Games) | 4x PNY 240 GB SSDs in Intel SATA2 RAID0 (On-Line Games) | eVGA Supernova G+ 1000 W PSU | Cooler Master HAF-XB | Windows 10 Pro x64 1809
Stock is Extreme now
Windows 10 64-bit, Intel 7700K @ 5.1GHz, 16GB 3600MHz CL15 DDR4 RAM, 2x GTX 1080 SLI, Asus Maximus IX Hero, Sound Blaster ZxR, PCIe Quad SSD, Oculus Rift CV1, DLP Link PGD-150 glasses, ViewSonic PJD6531w 3D DLP Projector @ 1280x800 120Hz native / 2560x1600 120Hz DSR 3D Gaming.
[right][snapback]253052[/snapback][/right]
[/quote]
It's more a case of
"Does he even have a clue?"
to which group I might just add yourself.
_____________________
"I was reading about your Tesla computer recently and it got me thinking..."
Yeah - I always equate an HPC parallel processor with 3D graphics...
"... in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative (however not entirely irrelevant) endeavors such as getting ones FPS to exceed far beyond what is visibly detectable..."
It's not a matter of visual perception, but computational and positional physics. Try [url="http://forums.nvidia.com/index.php?showtopic=35212&view=findpost&p=195689"]this posting[/url] and [url="http://forums.slizone.com/index.php?s=&showtopic=7953&view=findpost&p=52029"]this follow-up[/url] to clue yourselves in...
The opening to the above statement
"S-3D is greatly ignored and in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative..."
Who's pushing S-3D out to the masses? The application and hardware people, or the driver people? Other than the occassional forum such as this, does anyone push S-3D to the public? Or do the people who think S-3D is the "next wave" think they will expand its use simply by complaining to a specific driver developer? Or just sit back and wait for it to happen?
Or is nVidia to be expected to buy up all of the hardware so they can go full-fledge Stereo?
Is his focus even on the right area?...
...jaafaman
It's more a case of
"Does he even have a clue?"
to which group I might just add yourself.
_____________________
"I was reading about your Tesla computer recently and it got me thinking..."
Yeah - I always equate an HPC parallel processor with 3D graphics...
"... in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative (however not entirely irrelevant) endeavors such as getting ones FPS to exceed far beyond what is visibly detectable..."
It's not a matter of visual perception, but computational and positional physics. Try this posting and this follow-up to clue yourselves in...
The opening to the above statement
"S-3D is greatly ignored and in its place we have the consumers clamoring over far less innovative..."
Who's pushing S-3D out to the masses? The application and hardware people, or the driver people? Other than the occassional forum such as this, does anyone push S-3D to the public? Or do the people who think S-3D is the "next wave" think they will expand its use simply by complaining to a specific driver developer? Or just sit back and wait for it to happen?
Or is nVidia to be expected to buy up all of the hardware so they can go full-fledge Stereo?
Is his focus even on the right area?...
...jaafaman
"Gaming": Intel Xeon E5-1650 v2, Turbo 44x (5-6), 45x (3-4), 46x (1-2) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | SwifTech Apogee Drive II Pump and Block | 120 mm + 240 mm Push/Pull | 32 GB G.Skill PC3-12800 @ 1866 MHz | NVIDIA GTX 1080 FE | NVIDIA GTX 970 RE | Samsung U28E510 UHD | 2x PNY 480 GB SSDs in Intel SATA3 RAID0 (OS) | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (Disk Games) | 4x PNY 240 GB SSDs in Intel SATA2 RAID0 (On-Line Games) | eVGA Supernova G+ 1000 W PSU | Cooler Master HAF-XB | Windows 10 Pro x64 1809
Stock is Extreme now
Upon reading your above post, I would think to suggest reading his original post again as it clearly flew clear over your head.
And isn't it amazing how a small poke just in the right spot can extract such a marvelously entertaining response ^_^
Upon reading your above post, I would think to suggest reading his original post again as it clearly flew clear over your head.
And isn't it amazing how a small poke just in the right spot can extract such a marvelously entertaining response ^_^
Windows 10 64-bit, Intel 7700K @ 5.1GHz, 16GB 3600MHz CL15 DDR4 RAM, 2x GTX 1080 SLI, Asus Maximus IX Hero, Sound Blaster ZxR, PCIe Quad SSD, Oculus Rift CV1, DLP Link PGD-150 glasses, ViewSonic PJD6531w 3D DLP Projector @ 1280x800 120Hz native / 2560x1600 120Hz DSR 3D Gaming.
Upon reading your above post, I would think to suggest reading his original post again as it clearly flew clear over your head.
[/quote]
Quite right - I'm too dense to see this as other than a dig, and a dry one at that.
[quote]...And isn't it amazing how a small poke just in the right spot can extract such a marvelously entertaining response ^_^
[/quote]
While you're busy drawing the dots for me to connect, here's another entertaining thought:
"If you cannot defeat a man's argument, do not worry. You can always call him names..."
...from an author I'm sure you will recognize - or are you more the Churchhill type?...
...jaafaman
Upon reading your above post, I would think to suggest reading his original post again as it clearly flew clear over your head.
Quite right - I'm too dense to see this as other than a dig, and a dry one at that.
While you're busy drawing the dots for me to connect, here's another entertaining thought:
"If you cannot defeat a man's argument, do not worry. You can always call him names..."
...from an author I'm sure you will recognize - or are you more the Churchhill type?...
...jaafaman
"Gaming": Intel Xeon E5-1650 v2, Turbo 44x (5-6), 45x (3-4), 46x (1-2) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | SwifTech Apogee Drive II Pump and Block | 120 mm + 240 mm Push/Pull | 32 GB G.Skill PC3-12800 @ 1866 MHz | NVIDIA GTX 1080 FE | NVIDIA GTX 970 RE | Samsung U28E510 UHD | 2x PNY 480 GB SSDs in Intel SATA3 RAID0 (OS) | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (Disk Games) | 4x PNY 240 GB SSDs in Intel SATA2 RAID0 (On-Line Games) | eVGA Supernova G+ 1000 W PSU | Cooler Master HAF-XB | Windows 10 Pro x64 1809
Stock is Extreme now
Windows 10 64-bit, Intel 7700K @ 5.1GHz, 16GB 3600MHz CL15 DDR4 RAM, 2x GTX 1080 SLI, Asus Maximus IX Hero, Sound Blaster ZxR, PCIe Quad SSD, Oculus Rift CV1, DLP Link PGD-150 glasses, ViewSonic PJD6531w 3D DLP Projector @ 1280x800 120Hz native / 2560x1600 120Hz DSR 3D Gaming.
[right][snapback]253339[/snapback][/right]
[/quote]
Nah -
I believe I'll just stick around until I find someone actually capable enough to answer my original question...
...jaafaman
Nah -
I believe I'll just stick around until I find someone actually capable enough to answer my original question...
...jaafaman
"Gaming": Intel Xeon E5-1650 v2, Turbo 44x (5-6), 45x (3-4), 46x (1-2) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | SwifTech Apogee Drive II Pump and Block | 120 mm + 240 mm Push/Pull | 32 GB G.Skill PC3-12800 @ 1866 MHz | NVIDIA GTX 1080 FE | NVIDIA GTX 970 RE | Samsung U28E510 UHD | 2x PNY 480 GB SSDs in Intel SATA3 RAID0 (OS) | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (Disk Games) | 4x PNY 240 GB SSDs in Intel SATA2 RAID0 (On-Line Games) | eVGA Supernova G+ 1000 W PSU | Cooler Master HAF-XB | Windows 10 Pro x64 1809
Stock is Extreme now
It has nothing to do with the Tesla computer. I assumed that at least someone at Nvida must have some respect for Tesla simply because they named that system after him. The post was written to inspire any influential Tesla fans.
It has nothing to do with the Tesla computer. I assumed that at least someone at Nvida must have some respect for Tesla simply because they named that system after him. The post was written to inspire any influential Tesla fans.
It has nothing to do with the Tesla computer. I assumed that at least someone at Nvida must have some respect for Tesla simply because they named that system after him. The post was written to inspire any influential Tesla fans.
[right][snapback]253419[/snapback][/right]
[/quote]
And you, sir, have my public apology. As I said, I was too dense to pick up on the real message.
I do appreciate having the question answered...
...jaafaman
It has nothing to do with the Tesla computer. I assumed that at least someone at Nvida must have some respect for Tesla simply because they named that system after him. The post was written to inspire any influential Tesla fans.
And you, sir, have my public apology. As I said, I was too dense to pick up on the real message.
I do appreciate having the question answered...
...jaafaman
"Gaming": Intel Xeon E5-1650 v2, Turbo 44x (5-6), 45x (3-4), 46x (1-2) | ASUS Rampage IV Extreme | SwifTech Apogee Drive II Pump and Block | 120 mm + 240 mm Push/Pull | 32 GB G.Skill PC3-12800 @ 1866 MHz | NVIDIA GTX 1080 FE | NVIDIA GTX 970 RE | Samsung U28E510 UHD | 2x PNY 480 GB SSDs in Intel SATA3 RAID0 (OS) | Plextor 1TB PX-1TM9PeY PCIe NVMe (Disk Games) | 4x PNY 240 GB SSDs in Intel SATA2 RAID0 (On-Line Games) | eVGA Supernova G+ 1000 W PSU | Cooler Master HAF-XB | Windows 10 Pro x64 1809
Stock is Extreme now