AMD’s Radeon HD 5450: The Next Step In HTPC Video Cards
by Ryan Smith on February 4, 2010 12:00 AM EST- Posted in
- GPUs
Batman: Arkham Asylum
Batman, as one of the least GPU-intensive games in our suite, performs well enough that we can run it above 30fps without turning down any settings. We have to run at 1024 to do it, but it means we can keep all of the visual splendor, just at a lower resolution.
The already small gap between the 5450 and the 4550 particularly narrows here, coming down to 1 frame per second. On the flip side, the 5450 once again underperforms the GT 220 by more than half the GT 220’s performance.
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uibo - Thursday, February 4, 2010 - link
Why don't the Radeon "Cheese Slices" video screenshots have horizontal lines? The Nvidia ones have them...Ryan Smith - Thursday, February 4, 2010 - link
It's an artifact of stepping through the video one frame at a time with MPC-HC with the MS MPEG-2 decoder. Doing so captures the angled lines correctly, but it doesn't quite capture some of the other artifacts exactly the same because it ends up a field (basically half a frame) ahead.In motion the Radeon cards are getting it right.
blaubart - Tuesday, February 9, 2010 - link
Congrats Ryan, your Cheese Slices testing outside of a HTPC forum was really a big surprise for me! Keep on pushing AMD/Nvidia to realize that there's more than gamers in this world!> Horizontal 1p lines missing:
I'm also wondering normally the 1p lines are no problem in screenshots (MPC-HC and more). Maybe you shot them during the "odd movement" (1h+3v see description in Cheese Slices thread). I have now edited Post #1: screenshots only during "even movement".
This link shows it (sorry German):
http://www.dvbviewer.info/forum/index.php?s=&s...">http://www.dvbviewer.info/forum/index.p...c=34863&...
1080i-1 ---> odd movement
1080i-2 ---> even movement
What's more, GT220.png and G210.png show MA in 1p and "respone - noise" but VA in the ticker, How did you manage this? Ah I see, you left a mailaddress, I will send you a mail.
uibo - Thursday, February 4, 2010 - link
Oh and the Nvidia G210 has some artifacts for the vertical lines with some pixels shifted right.silverblue - Thursday, February 4, 2010 - link
...then this might call for an article to look at it in that very light. However, is there a higher performing part for both series that can be directly compared? I'm guessing not, as they all differ in some way, be it shader numbers, ROPs or texture units. The only way I can think to do it would be comparing two 512MB 4850s to a downclocked 5870, but even if that were possible, you'll still get a performance drop due to Crossfire. Hmm.MrSpadge - Thursday, February 4, 2010 - link
5770 is as close as it gets. THere's the difference in the memory subsystem, though. Could be that the best bench to run would be ShaderMark.GeorgeH - Thursday, February 4, 2010 - link
You mention the Sapphire's heatsink quite a bit, but I didn't see any pictures of it (at least the reverse side) in the article; was that an oversight or am I blind?Ryan Smith - Thursday, February 4, 2010 - link
Oversight. I thought I had a stock photo of the rear. I'll get one in the morning.If you're really curious, it's the same heatsink that's on their 4350, which there are plenty of pictures of.
GeorgeH - Thursday, February 4, 2010 - link
I see it now, thanks - it's actually not nearly as "bad" as I thought it'd be.Ryan Smith - Thursday, February 4, 2010 - link
Oversight. I thought I had a stock photo of the rear. I'll get one in the morning.