Preview: S3 Graphics DeltaChrome S8 Nitro
by Derek Wilson on March 9, 2004 3:44 AM EST- Posted in
- GPUs
The Test
For this preview, we will be using a subset of our game test used in our fall round up series, and we will be using the same test platform as in the budget GPU shootout. In fact, we will simply be dropping our DeltaChrome data into the budget GPU shootout graphs since this is simply a preview and not a real test of final performance -- we should only expect to get a fairly general idea of where things are and where they may go. Here is a list of the hardware we used:
AMD Athlon 64 FX-51
ASUS SK8V (VIA K8T800 chipset)
2x 512MB Registered DDR (2-2-3-6)
Seagate 120GB 7200 RPM (8MB Buffer)
As far as drivers go, midrange cards used the ForceWare 52.16 and Catalyst 3.8 drivers, while the budget cards made use of the 53.03 and 3.9 versions. The driver revision we will be using for the S8 Nitro is 15.08.09.b driver.
We have chosen not to do a full image quality analysis at this point becuase we feel it would be a waste of time. These drivers are very early and things are still very much in flux. There are already internal drivers that fix parts of the problems we will note in the following tests, and issues pointed out in previews such as this will most likely be addressed by S3 as well. We have seen how final WHQL certified drivers can change image qulaity between revisions, but fluctuations are even more dramatic on preview hardware and software. We will mention any visual issues we had when running certain tests, but beyond that we will wait for the actual release of the product to post our full analysis on uncompressed screenshots in all their glory.
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colinm - Saturday, May 15, 2004 - link
S3 needs to get good drivers for their other products before they even try to put a new product on the market. I bought a S3 Savage about the time the TNT was released and S3 still hasn't made solid drivers for it, much less ANY product released since then. S3 is a joke, don't be fooled for a moment. Don't buy their hardware no matter how much potential it has expecting them to eventually fix the driver issues because it will NOT happen.bldkc - Tuesday, April 6, 2004 - link
I agree, it's a POS. As a mechanical engineer I have guys coming in to see me every day with their "upgraded", or "more efficient" designs. All I know is it has to meet my specs. I will not vary my specs if there is someone else who will meet them.I tell them what I want, but they show up with something that doesn't meet my needs. Sound like the S3 with the Deltachrome? The point is that just because it does some things well does not mean it isn't a POS. Heck, my daughter's Reader Rabbit games would have this thing on it's knees.
kamper - Saturday, March 13, 2004 - link
also a spell checker wouldn't hurt too much would it? It's not "impliment" and it definitely isn't "impilment"kamper - Saturday, March 13, 2004 - link
as cliffa3 points out, you guys really need to hire someone with an english degree. Here's another one that had me scratching my head for a while:"Another option S3 has open to is will be to use..." wtf? (2nd last paragraph, last page)
aka1nas - Wednesday, March 10, 2004 - link
Well it obviously needs driver work, but, as long as they get it marketable and don't price it too high then they can make enough of their money back on it to keep them in the game. I think some of the problem with the graphics card market is that the few new players that try to enter the market either don't have the capital or fortitude to try to stay in for the long-term. Even if the deltachrome doesn't make a profit for S3, they can still quite possibly defray much of the cost of developing it and apply the experience in hardware design and drivers that they have gained and make a great second generation product. It takes time and a lot of coordination to get people to work effectively and efficiently at such a complicated project.LoneWolf15 - Wednesday, March 10, 2004 - link
S3 seems to have one continuous problem: They aim too low.I'm not saying they should go for top-end, but if you want to market a 3D vid card these days, then look at the current models you want to compete with --and then design a card that will beat their successor (in this case, the Radeon 9600XT/GeforceFX 5700). S3's cards, when released, are always cards we might have been interested in six months ago, but in the current market are either too pricey, or still not stable enough, guaranteeing that at the point S3 gets their drivers just right, the card is 8-10 months out of date, and only a good deal if priced in the $99 range, assuming they actually support the GPU for awhile with driver updates.
Serp86 - Wednesday, March 10, 2004 - link
yeah. it definately got potential, but it needs mature drivers.Kinda like the radeon 8500....(although it was high end, and performed good at release, if it was released with mature drivers it would have been the turning stone for ati, not the 9700Pro.)
Marsumane - Tuesday, March 9, 2004 - link
This is actually great news. If they actually get this card working to the level of a 9600 pro, then we could definately see some more sort lowering of the prices. This could prove to be very good for us consumers that like to buy sub $200 cards. It seems to have good potential, and I cant wait to see its final performance/price.AgaBooga - Tuesday, March 9, 2004 - link
From the results, I think it needs more driver workIdoxash - Tuesday, March 9, 2004 - link
"wow, another POS"I guess if nothing can out beat ATI and nVidia in speed it's a POS? There are many aspects of a video card then just speed alone. For example: From wut I read many months ago when S3 first talked about this new GFX card of theirs they stated it uses something like 7 watts of power. If that is the case then you have a GFX card that does dang good in speed and uses far, far, less power then any other GFX card.
In either way they should turn this into a intergrated chip as well for notebooks and mini-mobos. Be a nice gfx chip to have alone with a low energy consuming C3.
--Idoxash