[SunRescue] Q: about creator graphics cards...
Eric Ozrelic
rescue at sunhelp.org
Tue Apr 17 23:06:27 CDT 2001
If you want accelerated 2D in X, I.E you want windows to move around
quickly, like in Windows 98 and the likes then all of those cards will
perform almost identically. I found out the hard way when I went from PGX24
to Elite3D M3. There was no noticeable X performance gains. Using an X
server on a local Windows box will give you the fastest performance, and
24/32 bit color even with a 8 bit TGX installed.
Regards,
Eric Ozrelic
Computer/Network Consultant
1532 NW West Hills Ave
Bend OR 97701-1043
-----Original Message-----
From: rescue-admin at sunhelp.org [mailto:rescue-admin at sunhelp.org]On Behalf Of
Ken Hansen
Sent: Tuesday, April 17, 2001 9:00 PM
To: rescue at sunhelp.org
Subject: [SunRescue] Q: about creator graphics cards...
Well, having just crawled out from under a rather large rock, I find myself
ignorant in the ways of Creator graphics.
Situation:
I have three Ultra 2s, two of which need framebuffers (well, framebuffers
better than TGX).
Obviously, these machines have the creator "UPA" or whatever SBUS-looking
space available.
My application is general user display, nothing fancy because I don't know
about fancy things. A fast card for a 21" Sun Monitor would be great, also,
high resolution would be nice too on those 21 diagonal inches...
Opportunity:
anysystem.com (a "Bill B. Approved Vendor") has several versions of Creator
cards available, with prices ranging from $65 to $285:
Creator Series 1 $65
Creator Series 3 $125
Creator 3D Series 1 $95
Creator 3D Series 2 $250
Creator 3D Series 3 $285
Question:
Is price a reasonable indicator of anticipated performance? (i.e. is a
Cerator 3D Series 2 twice as fast/twice as good as a Creator Series 3?)
Thanks in advance,
Ken
(Who learned today that it is not a good thing to mix CPUs in an Ultra 2 - I
had a 300 MHz CPU in a machine configured for 200 MHz CPUs, and after
power-on, there was *no* output from the system. Same for a machine with
both a 200 MHz and a 300 MHz CPU installed.
It turns out that if the first CPU is the correct speed, but the second one
is not, you will get a message and the unit will power-down, putting out a
message on the console. If, on the otherhand, the wrong speed CPU is in the
first slot, and the right speed CPU is in the second slot, you get *no*
output.
I had 2 Ultra 2s delivered the other day, with no output *at all.* One was
2x 300 MHz, the other was 1x 200 MHz. I leave it to the reader to determine
how the CPUs were *actually* organized.)
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