It feels as if we’ve been waiting an age for Nvidia to release the full-line up of its 6-series GPUs; AMD managed the same feat inside of three months after all, hitting every price point from ...
A hardware enthusiast has taken an old GTX 660 out of retirement to see if modern upscaling technologies can make the ancient Kepler-based video card functional in 2025. GCS Hardware on YouTube ...
Nvidia has unveiled the GTX 660 and GTX 650, the latest in the chipmaker's line of Kepler-based graphics cards. The cards sport an MSRP of £179.99 ($229) and £89.00 ($199), and are available to order ...
GeForce GTX 660 Ti is hewn from the same GK104 die used by the GTX 670, GTX 680 and GTX 690 GPUs. NVIDIA, therefore, will not introduce a genuinely pared-down architecture until the GeForce GT(X) 650 ...
Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology. If you've been waiting a couple of years to upgrade your ...
The hiatus between new desktop GPU launches provides ample time - some say too much time - for manufacturers to tweak existing cards and offer a little extra to the customer. EVGA has turned its ...
It's been a curious year for NVIDIA and its leading Kepler graphics core tech. The spread of the GTX 600 series has been on the patchy side, primarily as a result of lower-than-average yields for the ...
Page 3: Gigabyte and Zotac GeForce GTX 660 Ti Cards Page 4: Test System and Unigine Heaven v3 Page 5: 3DMark 11 Performance Page 6: Lost Planet 2, Just Cause 2 Performance Page 7: Metro 2033 ...
Whilst we've been impressed with Nvidia graphics cards this year thanks to its Kepler GPU's power efficiency and turbo-boosting performance, it's not exactly been in a hurry to fill out its product ...
Last month, Nvidia shook up the enthusiast GPU market by launching its most affordable Kepler offering yet. At $299, the GK104-based GeForce GTX 660 Ti was $100 (~30%) cheaper than our previous ...
NVIDIA is good at many different things, but where the company truly excels is in its ability to fill every conceivable void in the GPU market. Have $100? There’s a card for you. Have $150? Ditto.