The digitalfoundry video on it said that performance is equal to running at around 1800p, but to me the upscaling honestly looks a lot better than what my TV can do, and the part where it actually does look better is the lack of temporal artifacts. That's the big deal for me. I like reprojection as long as it's not temporally smearing the image like it does in a lot of current TAA implementations.
Awesome, that's something to watch on my break.
I have a quick unrelated question though, if I have four dimm slots on my motherboard, could I use a configuration of 2x4gb and 2x8gb and still get dual channel as long as the matching sticks are in the right slots and they're all the same speed?
My brother has a asrock z97m pro4 mobo and is trying to install the one really popular USB3 PCI card that Oculus recommends into a PCI-e 16x slot (since that's all the mobo has). And even with a dedicated SATA power connector going to the card, nothing plugged into it is getting power. Does anybody have any experience with this? I don't know if somehow plugging a PCI-e 4x into a 16x slot is causing issues or what.
I have a 1x USB3 card that has a front panel connector on it since my motherboard was made before the USB3 front panel connector was standardized, in my bottom 16x slot.
Alright stupid question but is this graphics card compatible with this motherboard?
Would a theorical Ryzen 3 3200 (with 6 cores) and the RTX 2060 sound like a solid build?
As far as I know PCIE is backwards compatible but it may be worth a mother board upgrade as well.
Sure. PCIE 2.0 just barely bottlenecks a 1080Ti. Bulldozer and the FX platform in general are pretty bad in 2018, but they won't really hold back a mid-range card like the 580.
Ryzen 2600 and a 1070 has been serving me just fine, so why not?
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.