Final Words

As a card, the Radeon 9600 Pro Mac & PC Edition is an excellent offering.  If possible to do without significantly driving costs up, we'd like to see Mac & PC compatible offerings of all of ATI's GPUs, ideally even doing away with discrete Mac and PC products and replacing them with a line of cards that just work regardless of platform. 

What ATI has done with the Radeon 9600 Pro Mac & PC Edition is bring forth a 256MB card that offers a silent solution for those users wanting to move to a 30" Cinema Display.  The actual OS X UI performance of the card is just as good as ATI's top-of-the-line X800 XT. So, unless you are playing any games or running any applications that make extensive use of pixel shaders, the Radeon 9600 Pro Mac & PC Edition is a very functional card to pair with a 30" display.  The biggest draw in our opinion is the card's passive cooling; combine that with its 256MB frame buffer and you have a pretty decent solution for OS X users. 

Unfortunately, once you fire up a game or applications like Motion or iMaginator that actually depend on good pixel shader performance, the Radeon 9600 Pro Mac & PC Edition starts showing the age of its GPU.  Honestly, for $200, we'd expect something closer to the entry level X800s or even the X700 Pro in terms of performance, not a two-year-old Radeon 9600 Pro.  While ATI is making great efforts to bring equality between Mac and PC platforms by releasing a universal card like this one, by doing so on such a old and, by today's standards, underperforming GPU platform doesn't really help all that much. 

So, while the Radeon 9600 Pro Mac & PC Edition is useful, it is not the product that we're dreaming of.  It is a fine solution for those users who are still running non-GPU accelerated applications, but not too useful beyond that. 

Alongside the release of the Radeon 9600 Pro Mac & PC Edition, ATI is also changing around their retail Mac product line, as you can see from the slide below:

You can see that the Radeon X800 XT will receive a price cut sometime this month from $499 to $399.  The Radeon 9800 Pro Mac Special Edition will be killed off, as will the 128MB 9800 Pro, and both will be replaced by a single AGP 4X Radeon 9800 Pro with 256MB of memory priced at $299. 

Then, of course, there's the 9600 Pro announced today at $199, which should be available shortly. 

What's important to note here is that other than the entry level Radeon 9200, all of ATI's Mac Retail products will feature 256MB of memory.  And the mid-range cards will have completely done away with ADC connectors in favor of dual DVI or DVI + VGA.  While ATI has not announced any plans to bring any of their 512MB cards to the Mac market, we'd expect them to do so sometime next year. 

Application Pixel Shader Performance
Comments Locked

34 Comments

View All Comments

  • Cuser - Friday, August 19, 2005 - link

    I don't see the use for a video card that is cross-platform compatible, except in the corporate environment....yet it seems like this would be a good direction for future cards...which, now that I think of it, will be a moot point being that Mac is going x86...

    A side note though...
    Wow, there is a "gamer" base for the Macs? With framerates like 44 fps from their highest performing systems, I feel for them! Come on over the the x86 side, we'll take good care of you...
  • IceT - Friday, August 19, 2005 - link

    I also don't understand why ATi is launching such product @ this time...It seems (my opinion) that they are bringing us backward, unless you can provide me with some rationale.
  • sirfergy - Friday, August 19, 2005 - link

    The dual link functionality is why. Only other card for mac was the 6800 and that was very expensive.
  • Doormat - Friday, August 19, 2005 - link

    If someone can afford a 30" Cinema display to utilize the dual link capability, they can splurge on a 6800DDL over this card.
  • a2daj - Friday, August 19, 2005 - link

    Unless they have a G4 and want to use the 30" in it. Then the 6800 wouldn't be compatible. Only the new Mac Radoen 9600 Pro.
  • MrFantastic - Friday, August 19, 2005 - link

    "As a card, the Radeon 9600 Pro Mac & PC Edition is an excellent offering."

    LoL.

    It may as well NOT support PC's since no pc owner in their right mind should choose this '£200' oldie over something like a 9800pro/6600gt/800gt
  • a2daj - Friday, August 19, 2005 - link

    And how many of those "9800pro/6600gt/800gt" cards offer a dual-link DVI connector to run the 30" cinema display?
  • Scott66 - Friday, August 19, 2005 - link

    There are many mac users looking for an upgrade in video cards to take advantage of the new graphic abilities in the new Tiger OS software. (similar to what Vista is now announcing and will be included in subsequent beta versions). A 9600 card is just what the Mac doctor ordered. So I guess ATi is looking to provide a similar card for Window users who just want to get all the graphic features Vista can provide but not interested in gaming. If they keep the price low it will be a good seller
  • vijay333 - Friday, August 19, 2005 - link

    yes! I've always wanted to buy graphics cards 3-4 years after everyone else has had a chance to stress test them...

    funny thing is that I just upgraded from my 9600 Pro to a 6800GT :)
  • Questar - Friday, August 19, 2005 - link

    Wow, a review of a three year old GPU.
    My guess is that Anand had to give ATI a good suck in order to get 520 parts before launch.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now