Last night, AMD made public it's Catalyst 9.7 drivers. These drivers coincide with Windows 7 RTM availability and are WHQL certified for not only windows Vista, but for Windows 7 as well. But this isn't the only new and interesting tidbit about the Catalyst 9.7 release. AMD has reworked the advanced driver interface as well.

We are working on performance testing the new driver with an eye towards Windows 7. AMD claims that performance on Windows 7 boxes with the same hardware as a Vista counterpart will see performance benefits. The marketing slides we received indicate that some games could see about a 10% improvement when moving to the new OS, and that's just for single GPU configurations. With multiGPU setups, AMD has us expecting some titles to show between 15% and 30% improvement with Windows 7.

We are anxious to put the driver to the test as soon as we can get our hands on the final Windows 7 RTM build. A performance improvement in moving from Vista to Windows 7 could definitely help Microsoft move their latest operating system. Those gamers who are still holding out for something better than Windows XP might finally have a reason to let go of the older platform for one that delivers an all around better experience.

But in the meantime, there is another important change AMD made with the Catalyst 9.7 driver release. The UI has been overhauled. Let's have a look at the old version first:


Say goodbye to the Catalyst 9.6 interface pictured above.

The first change we notice is that the left menu tree structure is now gone. It is hidden in the Graphics menu option at the top left of the window.

For the most part, individual subsections are unchanged. But the new Desktops & Displays page pulls a bunch of related options into one place. All the desktop resolution and color settings, monitor specific settings, and multi-monitor layout adjustments for all desktops and monitors are combined in one place.

To access all the aforementioned settings, users will need to click on the appropriate upside down triangle for either the desktop or the display they wish to adjust. Unfortunately, despite the fact that organization is arguably improved, it seems to take more clicks to get where we want to go. It is no longer possible just to click directly to the desired page in an expanded tree menu. Now we have to click on the Graphics menu, select our major section, and then click on the tab that corresponds with the subsection we could have jumped straight to.


This appears when we click the triangle on the monitor and select "settings."

The Desktops & Displays section is easier to use with multiple monitors, but if you've only got one display then it is still an extra click or even two to adjust the settings for that display.


And here is what we get if we click the triangle for a desktop and select "properties."

The page we use most, the "All Settings" section of the 3D menu, used to be accessible in one click when the 3D menu was expanded. Thankfully, AMD kept one very useful feature intact: the first page that opens up is the last page that was visited. This means that we can go to the page we use most once and expect it to pop up every time we run the Catalyst Control Center. Most of the time we still have zero clicks to get where we are going.

Everything functions the same as it used to, provided you can find it now that things have changed. We do tend to complain most of the time when driver interfaces change. In fact, I'm still pining for the days of NVIDIA's 40 series Detonator interface. But we understand the value of most of the changes that AMD and NVIDIA have made over the years. Organizational changes to driver interfaces are designed to help direct users who don't already know exactly what they need.

Making adjustment of graphics driver settings easier for novice users is still a stated goal, but we feel the changes AMD has made in hiding whole sets of options behind upside down triangles on graphically represented desktops and displays is not going to make it any easier on end users. If anything, in our eyes, it complicates things even more.

We would really love the option to fully customize the UI and opt to have either the tree interface or this new version. But we've asked for such things before and are typically disappointed.

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  • DerekWilson - Thursday, July 23, 2009 - link

    AFAIK, the only major addition is the ability to manually enable multiple power states on 9 series and up desktop processors that support multiple power states. This can be done on a per application basis if I understand right.

    The bottom line is that you could throttle down your power consumption if you are running the SIMs or an MMO that doesn't require a lot of power and you don't want to run up your electric bill.

    Other than that it seems like bug fixes mostly.
  • jonup - Friday, July 24, 2009 - link

    Thanks! That was my understanding, too. I was just hoping for some hidden performance improvements.
  • haplo602 - Friday, July 24, 2009 - link

    I guess OpenGL does not interest windows gamers, but looking here http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&...">http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=a...amp;item... it seems the 190 Nvidia drivers include some opengl 3.2 version. so that's actualy a big change.

    I just hope the ATI 9.7 driver does about the same.
  • KOOLTIME - Thursday, July 23, 2009 - link

    Hopefully this newer driver and soon win 7 RTM will make us happy gamers again with stability in the x64 mode. To correct some of the Blue screens that occurs under win 7 with 9.6 drivers. Seems to happen in some games using ati 4890 1gb card. (blue screen 10000ea error)

    Thanks for the article for this, great info keeping us readers up to date. Im off to install n try the new catalyst -KT
  • cghebert - Thursday, July 23, 2009 - link

    I'm excited about the potential performance gains and Win7 compatibility of the driver, but not yet sold on the CCC update. To me, it seems like one of those "updates" that doesn't really add any additional functionality, it just requires you to relearn how to do things. Of course, I may change my opinion after installing it, but I don't have any problems with the layout of the current CCC.
  • jonup - Thursday, July 23, 2009 - link

    I've been using the leaked version of 9.7 for a week or so and the CCC is plain annoying. I did not get any new screens/options. The only diference is that instead of clicking on the manu to the left, now you have to click one on the drop down menu and then select the screen you want to go to. It is more of a one step back instead of one step forward. What they should have done is add a maximize botton so u can do full screen.
  • TejTrescent - Thursday, July 23, 2009 - link

    To something "simpler" but far more annoying to use. For the first time I find myself tempted to download only the driver update, without the updated CCC. That's still an option, right?
  • Shuri - Thursday, July 23, 2009 - link

    I've been doing just that for a while now. I use the latest version of ATI Tray Tools to handle all my 3D settings and custom profiles. The only option from CCC that I miss is GPU scaling, which is not implemented in ATT. But even that is not entirely necessary, so it's all good. :)
  • DerekWilson - Thursday, July 23, 2009 - link

    That is definitely still an option. But as time goes on you will probably need to update at some point in the future. But there should be a good life span for pre-9.7 CCC anyway.
  • cosmotic - Thursday, July 23, 2009 - link

    Still looks like crap. =(

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