I read the PCPer review, and I don't get some of his cost analysis. He adds the cost of the ActiveDP adapter to the ATI setup because he couldn't find a monitor with a DP connection in the "low-end (sub $230) 24-in 1080p panels available".
I have rarely seen them in that price range as well, everyone I know that is using eyefinity had to buy that adapter... they should have done like Nvidia did and made it possible to run 2 monitors on one card, and the other on the next card. This alone plus the huge performance gain will most likely make Nvidia the prefered choice when going surround. I don't know anyone that would pick ATI current offering over Nvidia's. I mean think about it any one of these cards is marketed for the core gamer anyway. Yea you can get one 5870 for $400 it will do eyefinity but not that great of performance with one card. Say someone already has 3 monitors or they can find regular 24" monitors without DP for cheaper than they can DP monitors just like the reviewer said. Now you add the $100 cost of adapter to that. Now your looking at $500 for one 5870 to work with three screens. Or you could pay an extra $100 and have two yes two GTX470's that kill 5870 crossfire performance. I think it is a no brainer. I don't see why you have such a hard time understanding the cost estimates, and why your upset when someone mentions the cost of adapters. Like I said before I already had two of my monitors, and I wanted them to match so it didn't make sense for me to sell both my monitors and buy three monitors with DP which are "more exp" just because one of the ports on my card needs to use DP. That didn't make sense. The extra $100 adapter was cheaper then buying all new monitors.
First, few 24" panels are 1080p. Most 24" panels are 1920x1200. To use 3D Surround you need a 1920x1080p 120Hz panel - not a 1920x1200 panel. So, he seems to be setting criteria that aren't reasonable and possibly unattainable. Most 1080p panels are 22" (actually 21.5") or 23" on the diagonal. This brings the panel price down. Additionally, both Dell and HP have IPS panels in these sizes in the $289 price range.
Why do you bring up the 3D monitors in this, that was for a whole different test just for Nvidia 3D. And everyone knows 1920X1080 @ 120 Hz monitor for 3D. I don't even know if they make 1200 @120 Hz displays. I am sure they used the same displays for the 2D surround though. But for them to get it to work yes they had to get an $100 adapter just like everyone I know did for eyefinity. Also there are many 24" 1080P monitors not sure what your talking about I looked on newegg and found 15 of them. So he was not setting criteria that aren't reasonable and possibly unattainable because they are all over. Found 24" 2ms Acer for $199 free shipping on newegg. I don't see any of those monitors having DP.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=100007617+600012673+600030619&QksAutoSuggestion=&ShowDeactivatedMark=False&Configurator=&IsNodeId=1&Subcategory=20&description=&Ntk=&CFG=&SpeTabStoreType=&srchInDesc=
Secondly, he seems to believe that users will spend between $600 - $900 on dual high-end GPUs from NVIDIA, but would only be looking at "low-end monitors." I would think these users would want the images they paid so much to generate to be displayed on at least a mid-range display. I believe most of these users would know the benefit of an IPS panel and be willing to spend the money on this quality panel.
I don't recall him saying that in the review, I think that comes down to your opinion on what is low end vs High End. I have no problem with my FH2401 monitors and I got them for $189 a piece. Are there any IPS 3D panels? I found one for 10K from panasonic. Are you going to tell me that it is worth that much money.
http://www2.panasonic.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/prModelDetail?storeId=11301&catalogId=13251&itemId=394528&modelNo=Content02122010120807194&surfModel=Content02122010120807194
I did find an IPS 24 panel with DP for $425 from HP but that would be $1275 just for 3 monitors vs $700 for 3 monitors and the adapter. So you can see that yea it does end up being more exp. I can't find a DP monitor in the 24" size that is in the $200 range.
http://h10010.www1.hp.com/wwpc/us/en/sm/WF04a/382087-382087-64283-72270-3884471.html
Finally, in his closing thoughts he thinks that if users get the chance to experience 3D Surround, they would spend the extra $650 for the 120Hz panels and the glasses. But, earlier he fails to make any concession that users would pay an extra $150 for three IPS panels with DisplayPort connections. Most users I know would be willing to pay the small additional cost ($50/panel) for a better quality panel with more connection options.
That's interesting you feel that way Ibrin I mean the article and review was not about monitors, it was comparing Eyefinity to Surround, and then showing Nvidia 3D Surround. So of course he is going to talk about the 3D monitors, why would you expect him to rant on about how users should spend more on IPS panels because they are a better quality panel. That would have nothing to do about the review. I mean sure yea throw some IPS panels into the review for ATI. It would make ATI that much more expensive though, and that was part of the review as well was comparing the cost. And yes I would agree with him, I think 3D monitors would be way more of an experience then these IPS monitors you always talk about. You think people would rather have a more exp IPS panel then a 3D monitor. It honestly looks to me like your getting worked up over this review. I hope I am not pissing you off, I am just saying I don't see how you are not seeing the whole picture and the point of the review.
Based on what I've read (NV didn't send me any hardware to evaluate), NVIDIA has a compelling offering. However, I feel that this review attempts to shoehorn in a price argument that adds $100 to the ATI cost. While someone might say it's "only $100", it basically doubles the cost difference between a 5870 and GTX470 SLI, or a 5970 and GTX480 SLI. For an additional comparison it adds another 25% savings when comparing a single 5870 to GTX480 SLI.
Compelling offering? it is the best offering, Everyone always talks about price vs performance on ATI side, well this time around for surround I think Nvidia is the clear winner. Like I said above, you can get 2 GTX470's for $600 and you can get a 5870 and an adapter for $500. The extra $100 for Nvidia route would be worth it to anyone I know, and on top of that you get cuda and physx.
But if you want to talk about well you don't need the adapter if you have DP monitors, ok that's true but they are going to be more exp than non DP monitors. I can't find any DP 24" monitors for $200. Nvidia does not need DP so using Nvidia route you can easily find 24" monitors for $200 and sometimes less, I got mine for $189 a piece and I love my monitors they look great IMHO. So my point is if you went ATI without the adapter, and got DP monitors it would end up bring more exp then just using the adapter, this would then make it just as expensive as Nvidia route. Do you know what the cheapest 24" monitor is out right now? I wanna know so I can add it up and see how the pricing really turns out.
And how does a $100 adapter double the cost difference.
Why would you compare the cost of a 5870 to two 480's when the 470's even beat 5870's crossfire by a lot. And 470's are cheaper
And yea I think everyone adds the adapter cost in. At least everyone I know had to get one.
Seems like you really do like ATI...
The whole point of the article was to show how much better performance you get with Nvidia Surround compared to ATI Eyefinity and I think they did just that.