Home

News

Forums

Hardware

CPUs

Mainboards

Video

Guides

CPU Prices

Memory Prices

Shop



Sharky Extreme :


Latest News


- Patriot Drops Memory Temperatures with the Vortex Cooling Fan
- MSI Introduces Two New Gaming Notebooks
- Palit Unveils Three New GeForce 9800 GT Video Cards
- D-Link is the First to Offer a Line of "Green" Routers
- Gigabyte Unleashes the GA-EG45M-DS2H Motherboard with GMA X4500HD Graphics
News Archives

Features

- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with Microsoft's Dan Odell
- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with ATI's Terry Makedon
- SharkyExtreme.com: Interview with Seagate's Joni Clark
- Half-Life 2 Review
- DOOM 3 Review

Buyer's Guides

- July High-end Gaming PC Buyer's Guide
- May Value Gaming PC Buyer's Guide
- March Extreme Gaming PC Buyer's Guide

HARDWARE

  • CPUs

    - AMD Phenom X4 9950 BE & 9350e Review

  • Motherboards

    - Gigabyte GA-MA790FX-DS5 Motherboard Review
    - AMD 780G Chipset Review

  • Video Cards

    - PNY XLR8 GeForce 9800 GX2 1GB Review
    - Gigabyte Radeon HD 3870 512MB Review




  • 3D Mark 2000, from MadOnion.com (formerly FutureMark) is a suite of benchmark tests designed to stress the Direct3D performance of your video accelerator by providing a controlled "real-world" gaming environment. Based on the Max-FX game engine and offering support for most of the features offered by DirectX 7 such as hardware T & L, SSE and 3Dnow! Accelerated geometry calculations, Bump-mapping (yes, environmental as well) and more, 3D Mark 2000 has become our benchmark of choice for testing DirectX 7 performance and compliance, now let's get on with the scores:


    The effect of the increased memory bandwidth offered by DDR RAM is apparent throughout as you can easily tell, but the performance gains are most noticeable at the higher resolutions and color depths where memory performance is stressed the most. While the SDR based LeadTek board is some 22% slower in 1024 x 768 at 32-bit than at 16-bit in our 3DMark tests the DDR based Outrageous 3D GeForce DDR is just 9% slower in 32-bit than it is at 16. The same is also true at 1280 x 1024 where the SDR board takes a performance hit of roughly 36% while the DDR board takes a hit of "only" 26%.





    Copyright © 2002 INT Media Group, Incorporated. All Rights Reserved. About INT Media Group | Press Releases | Privacy Policy | Career Opportunities