AndyT
05-03-2007, 09:51 PM
For some time now there has been a battle of sorts over these items and what good they are to us as users of FS9 and FSX.
I have been meaning to address these issues for quite a while but one thing or another has kept me from finding the time to post on it. Well, I happen to have some time now and since I do have 24 years in the industry, I think that I might have an idea or two to share.
1. Vista
Is it worth it? It depends on 2 things.
a. Do you have a multi-core machine?
b. Is DX10 ready yet?
Vista is an OS designed to use multi-cores. It will handle up to 4 cores according to Microsofts latest statements. That means that you will be able to run more add-ons (like Project Magenta or PMDG) at once and assign them to other cores which will help you keep your frames up. (Frames per second is a whole other debate and I'm not going there right now.)
Is DX10 ready yet?
What does this have to do with Vista? One of the main features of DX10 is that it removes much of the rendering from the CPU (computer) and puts it on the GPU (video card). when you add that to the multi-core support that Vista has you can see that there are some substantial gains to be had.
2. SLI and Crossfire;
These are both mostly hardware features. XP currently uses the CPU to do much of its rendering because of the way DX9 works. Once DX10 is out and running well, these two features will have the bottleneck opened up to allow them to work with Vista in the way they were designed to.
This is hardly an extensive explanation of these topics and there is of course room for further discussion
but I think with the above information you will begin to understand just what is really in store for us down the road. Some awesome improvements are coming our way. Add to this the SP1 update that will be ready soon, the fact that FSX has a far higher texture and mesh resolution and you should be able to see that FSX is a platform that we can build on for some time to come.
So based on the statements above I suggest you wait to buy your hardware until DX10 video cards settle down and get most of the bugs worked out which is normally 6 months after a major release. (The DX10 patch due later this year)
As far as hard drives, go big and go multiple RAID 0 if you can.
I have been meaning to address these issues for quite a while but one thing or another has kept me from finding the time to post on it. Well, I happen to have some time now and since I do have 24 years in the industry, I think that I might have an idea or two to share.
1. Vista
Is it worth it? It depends on 2 things.
a. Do you have a multi-core machine?
b. Is DX10 ready yet?
Vista is an OS designed to use multi-cores. It will handle up to 4 cores according to Microsofts latest statements. That means that you will be able to run more add-ons (like Project Magenta or PMDG) at once and assign them to other cores which will help you keep your frames up. (Frames per second is a whole other debate and I'm not going there right now.)
Is DX10 ready yet?
What does this have to do with Vista? One of the main features of DX10 is that it removes much of the rendering from the CPU (computer) and puts it on the GPU (video card). when you add that to the multi-core support that Vista has you can see that there are some substantial gains to be had.
2. SLI and Crossfire;
These are both mostly hardware features. XP currently uses the CPU to do much of its rendering because of the way DX9 works. Once DX10 is out and running well, these two features will have the bottleneck opened up to allow them to work with Vista in the way they were designed to.
This is hardly an extensive explanation of these topics and there is of course room for further discussion
but I think with the above information you will begin to understand just what is really in store for us down the road. Some awesome improvements are coming our way. Add to this the SP1 update that will be ready soon, the fact that FSX has a far higher texture and mesh resolution and you should be able to see that FSX is a platform that we can build on for some time to come.
So based on the statements above I suggest you wait to buy your hardware until DX10 video cards settle down and get most of the bugs worked out which is normally 6 months after a major release. (The DX10 patch due later this year)
As far as hard drives, go big and go multiple RAID 0 if you can.