Results for 4850
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Gaming Graphics Charts Q3/2008
Featuring 101 different combinations of single, dual, three-way, and four-way graphics card configurations, our VGA Charts for 2008 include the largest collection of benchmarks we’ve ever published — almost 7,000 scores, in fact. We have five generations of cards covered here, from AMD’s X800-, X1000-, HD 2000-, HD 3000-, and HD 4000-series to Nvidia’s GeForce 6-, 7-, 8-, 9-, and GTX 200-series boards. Our tested resolutions cover 1280x1024, 1680x1050, and 1920x1200—with and without AA/AF. So, whether you’re looking for the best value in graphics for your favorite game or investigating the benefit of multi-card rendering through CrossFire and SLI, this year’s VGA charts are the most comprehensive yet.
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Second Wave Of Radeon 4850 Cards To Go Against Nvidia's 9800 GTX+
Tuesday 24 June 2008 – 04:30
Toronto (Canada) - AMD is preparing an answer to Nvidia's recently released GeForce 9800GTX+ card. -
Radeon 4850 Briefly On Sale; Specs
Monday 16 June 2008 – 03:50
AMD's Radeon 4850 briefly made a sales spot on Amazon and other sites, but was eventually taken down. Specs however, were revealed. -
ATI Radeon 4850 Cards from HIS, PowerColor, Asus and More
Friday 27 June 2008 – 09:00
With the recent release of ATI’s Radeon 4850, we’re seeing a whole bunch of 4850 cards cropping up all over the place. The cat is barely out of the bag but we’ve already seen boards from Gigabyte, Asus, PowerColour, VisionTek, HIS, MSI, Diamond... -
First ATI Radeon HD 4850 Reviews Surface
Thursday 19 June 2008 – 10:30
AMD today partially lifted an embargo that prevented hardware review sites from publishing reviews of its upcoming HD 4850 GPU. -
New Vapor-Chamber Cooling Solution Coming to ATI Graphics Cards
Wednesday 22 October 2008 – 11:10
Need a new cooling solution, even for overclocking? CT Electronics Limited, a leading Vapor Chamber (VC) cooling solution provider announced its GVC-1 graphics card cooler.
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ATI Radeon HD 4850: Smarter by Design?*
Wednesday 25 June 2008 – 09:30
Nvidia's GeForce GTX200 focuses on brute force performance, while AMD's ATI division concentrates on features, efficiency and on performance per mm² of die. Is this enough to beat Nvidia?