Feature Overview

There are quite a few exciting new features being introduced with ATI's new X1000 series. Of course, we have a new line of hardware based on a more refined architecture. But at the end of the day, it's not the way that a company implements a dot product or manages memory latency that sells product; it's what consumers can do with the hardware that counts. ATI will not disappoint with the number of new features thtat they have included in their new top to bottom family of graphics hardware.

To provide a quick overview of the new lineup from ATI, here are the key featuers of the X1000 series.
  • Fabbed on TSMC's 90nm process
  • Shader Model 3.0 support
  • Fulltime/fullspeed fp32 processing for floating point pixel formats
  • New "Ring Bus" memory architecture with support for GDDR4
  • Antialiasing supported on MRT and fp16 output
  • High quality angle independent Anisotropic Filtering
  • AVIVO and advanced decode/encode support
Shader Model 3.0 has been covered quite a bit over the past year and a half. To quickly summarize the differences, Shader Model 3.0 requires hardware to support dynamic flow control in both the vertex and fragment pipeline. This means that if/else statements and looping are possible. Rather than unrolling loops in programs, SM3.0 can keep instruction counts lower for complex operations. Also, conditional rendering allows unified shaders to run on large areas and do different things on different pixels. Other features such as two-sided lighting and vertex textures are also possible. The real advantages of SM3.0 come in the form of number of registers, branching, relaxed instruction limits, efficiency and accuracy (fp32 support is required). And all these features are now supported top to bottom on both NVIDIA and ATI hardware.

Running on a 90nm TSMC process has given ATI the ability to push clock speeds quite high. With die sizes small and transistor counts high, ATI is able to pack a lot of performance in their new architecture. As the feature list indicates, ATI hasn't just waited idly by. But the real measure of what will be enough to put ATI back on top will be how much performance customers get for their money. To start answering that question, we first need to look at the parts launching and their prices.

ATI X1000 Series Features
Radeon X1300 Pro
Radeon X1600
Radeon X1800 XL
Radeon X1800 XT
Vertex Pipelines
2
5
8
8
Pixel Pipelines
4
12
16
16
Core Clock
600
590
500
625
Memory Size
256MB
256MB
256MB
512MB
Memory Data Rate
800MHz
1.38GHz
1GHz
1.5GHz
Texture Units
4
4
16
16
Render Backends
4
4
16
16
Z Compare Units
4
8
16
16
Maximum Threads
128
128
512
512
Avaialbility
This Week
11/30/2005
This Week
11/5/2005
MSRP
$149
$249
$449
$549

Along with all these features, CrossFire cards for the new X1000 series will be following in a few months. While we don't have anything to test, we can expect quite a few improvements from the next generation of ATI's multi-GPU solution. First and foremost, master cards will include a dual-link TMDS receiver to allow resolutions greater than 1600x1200 to run. This alone will make CrossFire on the X1000 series infinitely more useful than the current incarnation. We can also expect a better compositing engine built on a faster/larger FPGA. We look forward to checking out ATI's first viable multi-GPU solution as soon as it becomes available to us.

Rather than include AVIVO coverage in this article, we have published a separate article on ATI's X1000 series display hardware. The high points are a 10-bit gamma engine, H.264 accelerated decoding and hardware assisted transcoding. While we won't see transcoding support until the end of the year, we have H.264 decode support today. For more details, please check out our Avivo image quality comparison and technology overview.

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  • JarredWalton - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    Hence, the non-existence of 7600 and 7200 (or whatever) cards from NVIDIA. But ATI needed to get SM3.0 into budget and mid-range cards - not because it's tremendously useful, but because they're losing the marketing campaign on that item.
  • Phantronius - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    Wheres the fucking Battlefield 2 numbers?????
  • Dudeeeeeee - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    What about testing this card with games we actually play? Good game...
  • KayKay - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    I read most of the r520 reviews this morning and I decided to read anandtech's review, since i trust yours over most others. I was rather disappointed with the layout and choice of tests.

    All around the web, the result i gathered was that the x1800xt was definitely better than the 7800gtx in a number of areas and if i had read anandtech's review first, would have been totally misled.

    I am an NVIDIA user probably for LIFE but this review didn't seem to do ATI justice
  • bob661 - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    quote:

    I am an NVIDIA user probably for LIFE but this review didn't seem to do ATI justice
    Reviews aren't supposed to be favorable they're supposed to present facts so that WE the consumer can make informed purchase decisions. And right now, ATI doesn't present a good bang for the buck.
  • KayKay - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    the review wasn't structured in a way to present a fair comparison of the cards is all im saying. look no further than some of the other websites that reviewed todays launch
  • bob661 - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    It was easy for me. What are you looking for? The X1xxx's were compared to the 7xxx's. Are you looking for an ATI landslide or are you looking for a comparison?
  • Chadder007 - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    I was hoping that the X1600 would perform better, but for the price 6600GT and X800GTO >>>> X1600 parts. Sad. :(
  • Griswold - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    Probably the weakest review i've seen here at AT so far. The benches are more than just confusing. Some benches only show the XL, some only the XT and some both. Not good.
  • DigitalFreak - Wednesday, October 5, 2005 - link

    Agreed. I'm not a stickler for perfect grammer, but the grammer & spelling quality of AT articles has gone down hill tremendously in the past year!

    Seems you guys have just been throwing stuff together at the last minute to try and make a deadline. Anand - you need to step in here and get these guys back on track. It's hurting both your and your sites reputations.

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