TheFoxyShortBus, on 02 December 2012 - 11:13 PM, said:
Saying that "well most people won't see it" doesn't mean that it isn't any less fact. It would be the same as saying "I can't see gamma radiation so it must not exist" is a comparable to dismissing something because most won't see it.
Also it isn't a Margin of error, a margin of error is considered less than 5% on loose scientific explanations. Not upwards of 25% or higher. There is a effective boundary here. As to this.
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That makes absolutely no sense... This has been a problem long through out PCI-E's history, you can do it with 480's or 590's etc etc. And just because something isn't "cost effective" doesn't meant it won't be in real life, I will bet you there are over 5,000 people with those types of set ups and that can push 16 PCI-E lanes past through intended throughput.
I'm not trying to rag on you, but you said provide evidence (which I did) Explained it in a clear and reasonable manner that in fact one of your myth's wasn't a myth at all, but is a fact. Your dismissal was inaccurate because there is a large difference between PCI-E 2.0 and 3.0 (its a factor of 2 improvement) so saturating 16 PCI-E 2.0 lanes is roughly the same as saturating 8 PCI-E 3.0 lanes. SO obviously it will be harder to saturate 16 PCI-E 3.0 lanes (which hasn't been done). SO it only applies to PCI-E 2.0 lanes, which a lot of people who've built a PC in the past couple of years are probably still on because most people won't see the advantage of 3.0 on their systems, but a few can over saturate the lanes and see a performance decrease.
You sir are incorrect there is minimum difference if any between PCI express 2. and 3.0