What if they made a CPU and nobody came?
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WinCustomize Forums
Those of you who have been around PC's for awhile can remember when every megahertz made a difference. Heck, on my 386SX which came with the new "shadow bios" I would fool around with the bios just to get a slight improvement in performance.
Now, CPUs are at speeds greater than 2 GIGA-hertz. But outside of gaming and rendering, does anyone really care? And even on games, a good 3D care will make more difference than upgrading your CPU in many cases. I went to a Geforce 4 on my 1 Ghz machine and can now play the game just fine with all the goodies turned on.
It seems to be a struggle across the board to get hardware makers to stop focusing on games. The horse is dying. Even video card makers focus almost exclusively on making games run slightly faster (as if anyone is going to notice GTA 3 running at 150 frames instead of 140 frames per sec). All the while the CPU makers and video card makers have largely ignored what software developers can do on the desktop if they would just support the existing APIs better. WindowFX 2 can do effects that dwarf what is on MacOS X's Aqua UI. But it requires that the video card makers support (fix) their drivers.
This seems like an obvious area for CPU makers then. If they could put features into their chips that could be used to enhance say Windows XP effects APIs then that might give people a reason to look at new machines. Most people don't play games. The idea of people upgrading their machines purely for game reasons has long faded (mid 90s trend). Today, the desktop experience matters. The more accelerated graphics are in ways that can be displayed on the desktop, the more new ways that data and information can be displayed and manipulated on screen. Even the impressive features of WindowFX 2 are nothing compared to what could be done if there was more acceleration available.
One thing Intel and AMD could do is support a subset of DirectX that would be applicable on the desktop and make sure that Windows XP could utilize it. Then, if the video drivers aren't supporting it, the CPU could accelerate it and give new reason to upgrade.
Until then, I'll stick with my 1Ghz setup at home until there's a good reason to upgrade...
Now, CPUs are at speeds greater than 2 GIGA-hertz. But outside of gaming and rendering, does anyone really care? And even on games, a good 3D care will make more difference than upgrading your CPU in many cases. I went to a Geforce 4 on my 1 Ghz machine and can now play the game just fine with all the goodies turned on.
It seems to be a struggle across the board to get hardware makers to stop focusing on games. The horse is dying. Even video card makers focus almost exclusively on making games run slightly faster (as if anyone is going to notice GTA 3 running at 150 frames instead of 140 frames per sec). All the while the CPU makers and video card makers have largely ignored what software developers can do on the desktop if they would just support the existing APIs better. WindowFX 2 can do effects that dwarf what is on MacOS X's Aqua UI. But it requires that the video card makers support (fix) their drivers.
This seems like an obvious area for CPU makers then. If they could put features into their chips that could be used to enhance say Windows XP effects APIs then that might give people a reason to look at new machines. Most people don't play games. The idea of people upgrading their machines purely for game reasons has long faded (mid 90s trend). Today, the desktop experience matters. The more accelerated graphics are in ways that can be displayed on the desktop, the more new ways that data and information can be displayed and manipulated on screen. Even the impressive features of WindowFX 2 are nothing compared to what could be done if there was more acceleration available.
One thing Intel and AMD could do is support a subset of DirectX that would be applicable on the desktop and make sure that Windows XP could utilize it. Then, if the video drivers aren't supporting it, the CPU could accelerate it and give new reason to upgrade.
Until then, I'll stick with my 1Ghz setup at home until there's a good reason to upgrade...
So, I am definitely one gamer who has upgraded their PC in order to be able to play today's games (Morrowind anyone?) and many of my co-workers are the same way.