Interview: Bill Donnelly sheds some light on a whole lotta stuff.
AMD/ATI and its partners made quite a splash with the recent release of the 5 series GPUs, creating a lot of excitement about what future iterations of the cards will be able to do. With that in mind, The INQUIRER sat down with Bill Donnelly, Global PR Director of Sapphire.
While Donnelly's official title might denote pure marketing duties, he is in fact involved in early product qualification and testing, meaning he usually has his ear to the ground with regards to new releases. Taking this into consideration, we probed him on the implications the 5 series graphics cards hold for the company, as well as his general thoughts on the future of the industry.
Speaking about the 5 series, Donnelly revealed that the "tremendous response" the 5870 received was "as we expected", adding that with the implementation of features like DirectX 11, increased speed and lower power consumption, there's no reason Sapphire should have had any doubts about consumer response.
When quizzed about Nvidia's inevitable riposte, he declined to go into that too much, simply stating, "As far as I am aware, no competing technology will be able to offer these features for several months at least." If this can be taken as gospel, Nvidia will be missing out on valuable market share as early adopters of Windows 7 pick up the only DirectX 11 compatible cards - for now, ATI - in order to take advantage of the exclusive features available. In reality, we'd expect Nvidia to be gunning for an imminent release of its cards, to follow as close as possible to the arrival of Microsoft's new OS, which finally arrived on 22 October.
While it's still early days for the R800 based GPUs, we were keen to find out if Sapphire will be pushing out any upgraded versions before the Christmas season. Donnelly informed us that the firm already has engineering samples of a VaporX version of the HD 5870 and that it will also be looking at "performance optimised versions" of the cards, suggesting some overclocked editions aren't far away. He capped off his answer by telling us to "watch out for introductions in the coming weeks."
It won't be long until those with deep pockets can enjoy a brand new x2 variant humming away inside their rig. The question we put to Donnelly, though, was where does that technology go from here? Will we be seeing further development of single PCB cards, or is Crossfire technology where future performance lies? He explained that while two GPUs on a single card is practical, in terms of power, case real estate and data bus bandwidth, it wouldn't be feasible to add another at this time. Despite this, he didn't back it up by lauding the benefits of Crossfire, simply stating that "scaling on previous generations tends to flatten off at around three to four GPUs", inferring that for now, ATI, or at least Sapphire, would continue to push both options of increasing 3D performance.
The graphics card industry is often perceived to be one of the harder ones to work in, due to the balancing act that must be played. While the company's image is built almost solely by the performance of the top-end GPU cards, the most lucrative market is the mid-range. However, Donnelly debunked this somewhat, saying that recent releases apparently have made it "increasingly easy", with mid-range cards from the most recent generation usually achieving similar speeds as those at the high end of the previous one. He did say, however, that there was always the "halo effect" to consider; that the company holding the current performance crown ultimately sells more mid-range cards due to improved public perception.
theinquirer.net (c) 2009 Incisive Media
Issue: 107 | December, 2009