Guess it pays to wait. A little more than a week ago, AMD launched the
Radeon R9 290X graphics card for $550. On Tuesday, AMD unveiled the $399
Radeon R9 290, a bit slower on the performance front but much, much,
cheaper.
AMD’s new offering is based on the “Hawaii” architecture that AMD just unveiled at the end of September.
The Hawaii chips are based on what the company calls its
second-generation Graphics Core Next architecture. In our tests of the
R9 290X (shown above), AMD’s top-of-the-line card exceeded Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 780, giving the edge to AMD’s top-of-the-line architecture.
With the R9 290, AMD dropped the performance down a notch or two: 2860
stream processors for the 290X, versus 2560 for the 290, which is a 10
percent drop. That's complemented by a slower CPU speed: down from 1GHz
to 947MHz.
AMD also reduced the number of texture units
from 176 to 160. The cheaper 290 card’s compute rate also fell from 5.6
to 4.9 teraflops, while the pixel fill rate is now 60.6 Gpixels per
second, according
However, the new R9 290 card also supports Mantle,
AMD’s open low-level API for graphics processing, as well as the
nifty TrueAudio technology, which allows the graphics card to not only
offload audio processing from the GPU, but also to provide an almost
unlimited number of audio streams (dependent on the processing
limitations of the card).
According to a sample of reviews
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
AMD's new $399 R9 290 GPU continues premium graphics price-drop
2:55 AM
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