How AMD's EPYC Chips Triumph Over Nvidia's Grace Superchip: See Them Beat Benchmark Records by Twice the Speed
Bridging the Past and Present: The Ongoing Appeal of AGP Slot Modifications to Support New Graphics Cards & Networking Enhancements - Spotlight on Two Adaptors
Strangely enough, the past few months of 2024 have seen prominent discussions of a few modern-day AGP (Accelerated Graphics Port) mods — the first is a mod of questionable practicality to get a GTX 960 working on an AGP board, which took considerable gymnastics. The second involves repurposing an AGP port on a Super Socket 7 motherboard for faster, more modern networking speeds.
Tercio_miranda recently posted a mod from a retro PC gaming community on Facebook. The process (pictured below) involved using both an AGP-to-PCI and a PCI-to-PCIe adapter to install a GTX 960 onto an ancient motherboard.
The AGP interface is newer and, thus, likely faster than the PCI interface on the motherboard, so using the first adapter is highly questionable; however, the user probably didn’t have a PCI to PCIe adaptor handy. The GPU is ultimately listed in an included AIDA64 screenshot, showing that it is functional. The user didn’t share performance benchmarks, but this setup may be enough for Crysis.
Photograph of the AGP-to-PCI mod attached to the PCI-to-PCIe mod needed to install a GTX 960 in an old Athlon XP 2400+ PC. (Image credit: Christian Rudewig on FB (via @tercio_miranda on Twitter))
For instance, back in August of 2009, Don Woligroski,writing for_Tom’s Hardware_ , used an OC’d CPU and a powerful native AGP cardto get Crysis running at 65 FPS on Low Physics on an AGP board originally released in November 2005. PCIe debuted in 2003, so this was well after many faster boards with newer standards were already on the market. This means that, yes, AGP could run Crysis while it was still common, and it remained one of the most demanding games on PC for several years after its 2007 release.
LATEST VIDEOS FROM tomshardware Tom’s Hardware
Peoplestill test games with it these days, thoughCrysis: Remastered and its ray tracing are definitely the more intensive choice for modern, non-AGP graphics cards.
YouTuber RECNAS also has a minute-long YouTube video that highlights his Super Socket 7 motherboard and, subsequently, an AGP-to-PCI networking adapter. Since RECNAS wanted to repurpose this roughly late 90s-era Super Socket 7 motherboard as aNAS , he didn’t want to be relegated to the slower, shared PCI bandwidth on the board.
This means that if he could get the NAS running through the fastest available port on the board, AGP, he could achieve the speed he’s looking for. We’ve embedded the original video of him achieving this below.
Stay On the Cutting Edge: Get the Tom’s Hardware Newsletter
Get Tom’s Hardware’s best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox.
Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors
By submitting your information you agree to theTerms & Conditions andPrivacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.
After testing with the AGP-to-PCI adapter, he’s achieved just over 200 MB/s throughput on his Super Socket 7 Board. The exact reading averages 198 Mebibytes per second, which converts to roughly 207 MB/s. This is compared to the reported shared PCI bandwidth of 133 MB/s, or more realistically, 92 MB/s, according to RECNAS.
Now, the maximum rate of the original AGP port is 533 MB/s, and AGP 3.5 eventually phased out at 2133 MB/s— but as the name implies, these ports were targeted at graphics expansions, not storage. The later stage of AGP graphics support could get pretty interesting, though, especially if you were willing tooverclock your AGP-supported motherboard .
As you can see, the modding community is still hard at work wringing more functionality out of old gear, either for entertainment or out of necessity.
Also read:
- [New] 2024 Approved Decibel Documentation System and Speech
- [New] In 2024, Securing Visuals The Method of Concealing Details
- [Updated] 2024 Approved Smooth Transitions & Precision Capture Analyzing Top OBS Recorders
- [Updated] 2024 Approved Unveiling the Art of Smoothing Zoom Screenshots
- [Updated] Amplifying Your Videos Music Integration on Win11
- [Updated] Expert Insights Into .MOV File Recording on Latest Win 11 Edition
- [Updated] The Art of Recording Fun 6 Techniques to Document Minecraft for 2024
- Expert Insight on the Luxury Ambient Weather WS-1002 WiFi Device: Stellar Quality at a High Expense
- Hard Resetting an Samsung Galaxy A23 5G Device Made Easy | Dr.fone
- How to Troubleshoot Minecraft Crashes on Windows and Macs
- In 2024, How to Watch Hulu Outside US On Motorola Razr 40 | Dr.fone
- Panne De Sauvegarde Du Système Windows Server 201 #WEITERLEITUNG Kathedrale Von Ripatransone
- Unleashing Potential Top 10 Strategies for Instagram Video Ads for 2024
- Title: How AMD's EPYC Chips Triumph Over Nvidia's Grace Superchip: See Them Beat Benchmark Records by Twice the Speed
- Author: Catherine
- Created at : 2024-12-10 17:38:40
- Updated at : 2024-12-14 05:12:48
- Link: https://desktop-recording.techidaily.com/how-amds-epyc-chips-triumph-over-nvidias-grace-superchip-see-them-beat-benchmark-records-by-twice-the-speed/
- License: This work is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0.