NVIDIA GeForce2 MX

by Anand Lal Shimpi on June 28, 2000 9:30 AM EST

Professional OpenGL Performance

Since the GeForce2 MX has the same hardware T&L engine of the GeForce and GeForce2 GTS it is a great contender as a professional OpenGL card under Windows NT/2000. We'll have a full professional review of the GeForce2 MX later but for now the above benchmarks should illustrate that for $119, you can get a pretty powerful professional OpenGL accelerator as well as a more than decent gaming card.

UnrealTournament - Pentium III 550E Final Words
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  • Dr AB - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    So 20 years laters I can say it is analogous to MAX-Q cards that we see today? Seems same logic behind it.
  • Dr AB - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    *later
  • Otritus - Friday, October 2, 2020 - link

    The logic behind MAX-Q is severely reduce clock speeds and voltage to reduce power consumption. This is analogous to entry-level gpus such as tu117 in the gtx 1650. Cut down the hardware to reduce cost and power consumption, and have slightly lower clocks to hit tdp targets.

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