– November 29, 2011 — Experience gaming nirvana with the EVGA GTX 560 Ti 448 Cores. EVGA has boosted this card to 448 Processing Cores, upgraded the memory to 1.2GB and added full support for NVIDIA 3 ...
Assuming you will be gaming at 1080p, a single 560 Ti is all you need. You can overclock it to perform just like a 570, and should be able to run BF3 at almost-ultra settings. As for video RAM, 1GB is ...
The upgrade bug has hit, so I'm offering 2 EVGA 560 Ti cards, the 2GB models (great for Surround). Neither have been overclocked, and both were purchased after EVGA's new transferrable warranties took ...
The reference GeForce GTX 560 Ti looks much like the GTX 460, but there are some improvement lurking beneath the card’s fan shroud. NVIDIA improved the cooling by using a larger heatsink with an ...
Looks like the folks over at Gigabyte have also released their own version of the GeForce GTX 560 Ti 448 core. It’ll come equipped with Gigabyte’s own Windforce 3x fan cooler design. Read below for ...
What has a 950Mhz engine clock, 1GB of DDR5 memory, 356-bit of pure interface, 4400MHz memory clock, two dual-link DVI-I/mini-HDMI 1.4a outputs, a PCI Express 2.0 interface, 348 unified shaders and to ...
NVIDIA's reference GeForce GTX 560 Ti 1GB card looks eerily similar to the GTX 460 1GB released in July 2010, though that's no bad thing as the reference card was good in all respects. The PCB ...
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