Saturday 31 December 2011

From 2011 to 2012: What the tech pros think


As we near the end of 2011, and speed towards 2012, it's time for introspection, calculation and some good old fashioned guesswork. We asked various professionals from various companies across various categories of the tech industry what the highlights of 2011 were and what they are predicting for 2012. Take a look.

2011
2011 has been called many things. The year of the iPad. The year of cloud computing. The year of Android. But stepping out of the industry analysts shoes, we also have to take a look at what the year meant to the people who are the tech industry. Every company has their proud product of 2011 as well as a general outlook on the year. Let’s take a look.

The Year of Windows Phone 
The Windows and Nokia offspring: the Lumia
The Windows and Nokia offspring: the Lumia


While Apple and Android battled it out and Symbian slowly slipped away, Microsoft snuck in a game changer of a mobile OS, this year. More importantly, the Nokia and Microsoft partnership proved somewhat successfully for both companies who have been trying to stay healthy in the mobile space. Vishal Gondal, CEO of India Games says, “The Nokia Lumia is the closest anyone has come to being an iPhone competitor. I urge people to go to a Nokia store and try the device”. Microsoft, obviously proud of their baby has said that the platform is poised for success. Chakrapani GK, Head of the Consumer Channels Group, Microsoft Corp India has said, “By 2015, leading analysts, IDC and Gartner have forecasted Windows Phone to be among the Top 3 mobile platforms globally.

The Year of the Tablet
Even though the original iPad was launched in 2010, the 2011 saw the effect the iPad 2 had on the tech industry. Most notably the gaming industry. Gondal of IndiaGames says, “The launch of the iPad 2 was very exciting. The console is a dying platform, while gaming on the iPad gets more sophisticated”. 
The iPad changed things up this year
The iPad changed things up this year


But beyond the iPad, which of course, generated the tablet space for tech companies, 2011 is the year of the tablet for the sheer number of tablets that were released. Sunil Lalvani, Director of Enterprise Sales for Research in Motion in India, says, “While the tablet segment in India is in its nascent stage, its utility and popularity will only increase.” RIM’s contribution to the tablet space was the BlackBerry PlayBook. Lalvani adds, “The BlackBerry PlayBook powered by QNX is a multitasking powerhouse that has not only great multimedia functions but also rides on a secure platform that supports enterprise needs as well.
The BlackBerry PlayBook was RIM's pride
The BlackBerry PlayBook was RIM's pride


India’s own venture to the international tablet space is Notion Ink with their Adam. The Adam has been available in the country for 6 months and according to Rohan Shravan, CEO of Notion Ink, the second half of this year has been focused on improving the hardware of their product. “In the second half we have been designing not just the looks, but the hardware itself. It might not be of value to the normal eye, but for us its a great deal. Going through every resistor, antennae design, chip selection based on software requirement, layouts based on EMC, and most importantly reconfiguring everything from scratch again, if power expectation doesn't match."
India's venture into the international tablet space: the Adam
India's venture into the international tablet space: the Adam


The Year of the DigitalWe're not talking about zeros and ones, but really, the Internet of everything. Mobile apps were launched, mobile apps that were launched in 2010 gained traction in 2011, mobile gaming and social networking became actual pastimes. App developer Banerjee says, “We have seen some big games (Infinity Blade), lifestyle (Cards), News (Flipboard). Almost every category has something new and brilliant stuff”.
The big Indian game was Ra One, the follow-up to the Shah Rukh Khan blockbuster, developed by UTV IndiaGames. Gondal says, “Ra One had 2.5 million downloads from the Nokia Store and overall, 8 million downloads from other stores. Millions and millions of people are adopting the mobile and social networking.

Online shopping and e-commerce also became more mainstream in the country. Amit Somani, Chief Products Officer of MakeMyTrip.com  says, “As more and more travelers in India shift to the online medium for planning and booking their travel, 2011 has been a great year for online travel agencies like MakeMyTrip.com.” With the rise in mobile app usage, MakeMyTrip also launched their own mobile app this year. Somani says, “We’re seeing rapidly rising searches on the mobile platform. Connection speeds on the mobile and super complex payment processes mandated by the financial services companies and RBI are key challenges for people to do transactions on the mobile. Even though bookings are slow to take off, the search and browsing behavior on the mobile and tablets is quite heartening to see.”

While people may not be booking plane tickets online, mobile payment has begun peeping its head into the country. Developer, Banerjee says, “In terms of mobile payments, I see a lot of companies investing in this sector, both in India and abroad. Look at Starbucks whose mobile app had processed 26 million transactions since its January 2011 launch. Plus apps like Google Wallet, Square, PayMate (India) reinstated the fact this year that Mobile Payment Method is no longer a myth.
The cloud is high on the list
The cloud is high on the list


Finally, since we’re still on the Internet, 2011 was the year of the cloud, more specifically iCloud. When asked which was the biggest innovation of 2011, Somani of MakeMyTrip answered, “iCloud.” Shishir Singh, Director of Product Marketing, Consumer S&B of Dell, India said, “Cloud computing is at a tipping point and we see it as a big opportunity for growing businesses to keep up with their growth without having to invest in and manage their infrastructure.” 

Bonus: Individual pride
Each tech professional that we talked to had a product or two of theirs that they were particularly proud of, this year. For Asus, according to Alex Huang, Country Head of Asus India, it was the Asus Zenbook and the Asus Transformer. For Microsoft, of course, it was Windows Phone 7 and for Research in Motion it was the BlackBerry PlayBook as well as their app store. According to Sunil Lalvani of Dell, “With over 5000 apps and 5 million downloads a day, the BlackBerry App World has become the second most profitable app store globally”.

For Sony, it was their motion controlled gaming system, particularly the PlayStation Move. Atindriya Bose, Country Manager, Sony India said, “Year 2011 has been used to strongly establish & win the Motion sensing gaming space with the PS3 Move platform. This has been a great success internationally as well as in India. We expect the same success to drive the PS3 platform deeper into the Indian family audience who now perceive the PS3 as a complete solution beyond gaming that allows him BluRay functionality, 3D experience and media manager utility with the PS3 hard disc space.
The PS3 Move was Sony's pride
The PS3 Move was Sony's pride



For some local favourites, Notion Ink’s pride was their Adam tablet of course, and for IndiaGames, it was Ra One. 

Tech industry's predictions for 2012
Not many may have envisaged that tablets would be reigning the tech world, giving laptops and smartphones a stiff competition. And we really don’t know what this year would unfold for the tech realm. While many are busy dishing out that perfect resolution for the year 2012, we asked the industry experts what they predict for the coming year in the technology segment. Here’s what they said.

A slew of quad-core phones
With the leading operating systems ready to support a quad-core processor, we believe that the smartphone market may see a rise in the number of quad-core phones, rather most high-end portable devices (read smartphones and tablets) may come equipped with a quad-core processor. Qualcomm, Nvidia and Samsung have already set the wheel in motion, while we saw a few phones running on quad-core processors this year, too. Industry experts believe it isn’t just about dual core, but a complete package of high-end technologies which will drive the smartphone market. As the phone platform gets powerful, we can expect advanced computing mobile phones. Faisal Siddiqui, Country Manager, HTC believes that Quad Core will bring handsets to a level of performance equivalent to that of a desktop computer. He predicts powerful gadgets like mobile phones with quad-core processors, enhanced camera and multimedia experiences that rivals cameras and mp3 players will be the limelight of 2012. 

When asked Sunil Lalvani, Director, Enterprise sales, RIM, he expressed, “While the industry is seeing a rapid adoption of higher processing power, quad core processor could be a widely used in smartphones. We at Research In Motion (RIM) believe that a compelling user experience is driven by hardware, software and service integration.”  Rohan Shravan, CEO, Notion Ink predicts Quad Core Marketing Push for the next year.
Everyone wants a scoop of the cloud (Image Credit: Getty Images)
Everyone wants a scoop of the cloud (Image Credit: Getty Images)


Cloud Computing to get a boost
While cloud computing was received really well by the industry in 2011, it is expected to grow further next year. Industry experts believe a lot to be happening in this space. Alex Huang, Country Head, Asus said that the cloud computing segment will continue to grow. Shishir Singh, Director – Product Marketing, Dell India also states that Cloud computing is at a tipping point and they view it as a big opportunity for growing businesses to keep up with the growth without having to invest in and manage their infrastructure.

Enterprises are expected to rely on cloud computing on a greater extent, while other sectors are also likely to adopt it at a swifter pace. “As businesses are globalizing, enterprise mobility solutions are of paramount importance for competitive differentiation and profitability. Enterprises and SMBs will increasingly rely on mobility solutions in areas such as CRM, project planning, inventory and sales management etc. BFSI, ITeS, manufacturing, retail, logistics and healthcare are some of the sectors that have been adopting such technologies,” says Sunil Lalvani. 

Sleeker form factor and demand for multiple size devices
Seemingly, the next year, devices will strictly follow the ‘thin is in’ trend, so users can look forward to slimmer devices. With devices coming in multiple sizes, each could apparently get a fair share of market space. Chakrapani GK, Head, Consumer Channels Group, Microsoft Corporation expects a multitude of device form factors in the market, especially with the upcoming beta of Windows 8. Alex Huang said, “Consumers/enterprise will look at gadgets with portability. In addition, users will look at sleek designs like the one from our stable—Zenbook.
Sizes for all
Sizes for all (Image Credit: Getty Images)


The year will bring in more choices in the device size as well as the way we want to interact with others. Amit Somani,  Chief Products Officer, MakeMyTrip.com predicts, “Many customers will have 2-5 different ways of connecting to the world including phones, tablets, PCs, gaming consoles and Television.” Shishir Singh feels its one of the key trends to watch out for as laptops are getting slimmer, and at the same time are packed with performance. We believe that mobility will dictate the form factor of computing devices in the years to follow. We expect to see a proliferation of devices in different screen sizes to meet different needs as accessibility of information-on-the-go, becomes inevitable.

Faisal Siddiqui feels there is lot expected in the sphere of innovation in static computing space with more powerful and productivity enhancing tablets. The technology further would become user friendly and the initiative has been taken by HTC with launch of HTC Explorer in regional languages. 

Looking forward to more from Windows Phone
There are already speculations about Windows operating system to be widely accepted, getting at par with the current leading players in the mobile arena. Siddharth Banerjee, an app developer says, “In terms of consumer shift, yes we will see a shift from Android and BB users to WP7. You must be thinking that why I’m not talking about the shift from iOS to WP7? India is a cash economy. If you have already bought an Rs. 32,000 iPhone this year, I don't think you will spend another Rs 30,000 in six months.”

People want easy and seamless ways to interact with their devices, this puts into picture the Natural User Interface (NUI). Chakrapani GK said, “In 2012, voice and gesture based interactions will proliferate across devices and form factors resulting in technologies becoming more intuitive and inclusive. This will also be driven through the increasing uptake for devices such as Microsoft Kinect and Windows Phone showing innovations in the area of NUI.” 

Rise in mobile gaming/apps
The mobile gaming has been viewed as a promising area for next year. The gaming as a whole will be explored with newer and next generation tech innovations. Vishal Gondal, CEO, Indiagames says, “Gaming industry next year will continue to be dominated by mobile and tablets. More games that are freemium. Expecting a lot more cloud features on games. Excited about iCloud and Microsoft Xbox gaming.” Chakrapani GK believes that next year the Indian mobile market will witness a turning point in development of local mobile apps from India and real, scalable application innovation coming from Indian developers. The Windows Phone environment will see some compelling and marquee apps.
Go mobile..in 2012
Go mobile..in 2012 (Image Credit: Getty Images)


More powerful handheld devices and their deeper penetration in our lives could pave way to people spending more time exploring them. Sunil Lalvani says that with more processing powers and rich multimedia support, mobile gaming is increasingly becoming popular. Motion sensor gaming is another technology that is going to grow in the times to come. Shishir Singh feels that gaming already is a lucrative area in the mobile app development domain, and there's a trend towards building apps that use location-based services and also provide content sharing over social networking.

Amit Somani reveals that they are witnessing rapidly rising searches on the mobile platform for MakeMyTrip, which also has an app on the BlackBerry platform. “Connection speeds on the mobile and super complex payment processes mandated by the financial services companies and RBI are key challenges for people to do transactions on the mobile,” he adds.  

Augmented reality and social networks
Developers have been embracing newer technologies like augmented reality and location-based searches while social networks have been increasingly being used on-the-go. Amit Somani predicts that next year feature phones will get decent browser support and applications like Facebook and Twitter will extend their shelf life. Siddharth Banerjee says, “In 2012, I’m expecting to see a lot of apps using Augmented Reality (AR). It has already started and 2012 will see more of it. There’s a huge scope of using AR in the Retail and Tourism Industry.

Augmented Reality and Social apps seem to be adding on to the list of phone makers. Sunil Lalvani says,” Some of the next generation BlackBerry smartphones powered by BlackBerry 7 OS are loaded with AR applications like Wikitude to help users find location based information instantly.” Chakrapani disclosed that, " Social continues to be a major trend and we will see seamless integration of multiple social networks across Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and others."

Wider adoption of NFC
The NFC technology isn’t something new to the mobile industry. As it’s in a nascent stage, it’s difficult to comment easy and quick the adoption could be in India, as we’ve just started witnessing online payments on a larger scale. Could it be the next big thing? Sunil Lalvani feels that NFC technology has immense potential in enterprise and consumer space and will be increasingly used in various enterprise and consumer sectors. They can be used for easy payments, enable content sharing and social activities. While NFC is still at the nascent stage in India, this platform is set to define mobility in true sense. 

NFC is predicted to make an entry into varying fields. Siddharth believes that NFC technology is another important trend we should see along with RFID Reader, especially in the medical field. Somani also predicts that Mobile wallets and peer to peer payments can catch fire globally.
More time over Internet
More time over Internet (Iamge Credit: Getty Images)


Rise in Internet use
We seen a boost in the Internet usage in India and the way we’ve been consuming digital technology. There has been an increase in the number of people spending time on Internet, leading to wider access of digital data, be it music, videos, social networks or e-commerce. Amit Somani, Chief Products Officer, MakeMyTrip.com, predicts,” More new folks in India will have a “taste” of the internet in 2012 than all of the previous years combined. This will obviously be both through the mobile and desktop. Payments 3.0 companies or solutions emerge that solve for easy and reliable online payments for a mass audience.  Mobile wallets and peer to peer payments catch fire globally.

Higher Resolution screens
Rohan Shravan predicts that next year we’d see higher resolution (1920 x 1200) screen, which should be the norm by the third quarter. He also predicts Google fighting Siri, some traction for webOS, tons of OMAP products and highest possible definition Maps.

In the pipeline
As most of us continue to wait to welcome yet another tech-imbued year, its interesting to know what tech would help mould it. A few industry experts gave a sneak peek into what their companies has in store for the year 2012. Read on to know what they’ve said.

BlackBerry 10 and Porsche Design P’9981
Needless to say, smartphones and tablets running on the BlackBerry 10 are expected to come somewhere around next year. The OS is a mix of BlackBerry and QNX, to offer distinguishable BlackBerry products and services. Also, RIM’s entry into luxury handsets will be marked next year with the recently disclosed Porsche Design P’9981. Sunil Lalvani, Director, Enterprise sales, RIM revealed, “In 2012, you would see RIM launching the much talked about BlackBerry 10 operating system. BlackBerry 10 is the next generation platform for BlackBerry smartphones and tablets. The latest launch of the Porsche Design P’9981 – consolidates our offerings in the luxury smartphone segment. Set to be launched in early 2012, it is going to be a unique smartphone that will deliver engineered luxury and performance.
A statement in style
A statement in style


Sony PS Vita 
A lot has been happening on the gaming front with the motion sensing technology adopted by key gaming players. Sony further goes on to redefine the handheld gaming experience. Talking about what’s on the plate for next year, Atindriya Bose, Country Manager- India, Sony Computer Entertainment revealed, “The biggest introduction in gaming hardware from Sony PlayStation will be the PS Vita that is scheduled to launch in India in the 1st quarter of calendar year 2012. With a touch screen, rear touchpad, dual joystick control, camera arrangement, the PS Vita will provide the truly immersive gaming experience. The same will be launched with a strong range of high quality games from both Sony and other Third Party publishers to make it a truly great purchase. PSVita will be coming in two varieties – Wifi & 3G and will provide a number of 3G functionalities to create a networked fun and play environment.

Kinect and Xbox Gaming
Gaming is likely to see a boost in the next year. Microsoft has also geared up on offering Xbox and Kinect Games for gamers, children and families. Chakrapani says that next year the Kinect portfolio will expand to include core gaming experiences with upcoming titles like Mass Effect 3, Tiger Woods PGA Tour 13, Madden 2012, FIFA 2013 and Ghost Recon: Future Soldier. Through “Kinect Sesame Street TV,” “Kinect Nat Geo TV” and “Project Columbia” (codename), Kinect for Xbox 360 will introduce “playful learning” experiences, creating new ways to learn through full-body, interactive fun.

Adam 2
The Adam has been available in India through Flipkart for the last six months, and the next version of the Adam is on its way next year. According to Rohan Shravan, CEO, Notion Ink, the company will offer the Adam 2 along with alternate distribution strategies, and very new modular software. As much as we would have liked it, Notion Ink doesn’t intend to step into the smartphone terrain yet.
With better chips and screens?!?
Next Adam on the way


Notebooks
Alex Huang puts an end to rumors that Asus will be quitting the tablet market and also reveals that netbooks haven’t reached the dead end. He says that the netbook market will be stable. As for what’s in the pipeline, he says, “In 2012, we are aiming at becoming one of the top 5 players in the notebook space.”

Dell has dished out various products with its newer Vostros, XPSs, Inspirons and more. For next year, Shishir Singh, Director – Product Marketing. Dell says, “We will continue to target prosumers to enable them to pursue their passions through technology, thus enabling them to enjoy an “always connected” lifestyle. We don’t just create products because we can; they are designed with our customers in mind to create great experiences and enable them to manage their lives more efficiently. We believe that our customer services and solutions will be the key differentiator for Dell over the next year for both the home as well as the commercial segments.

Windows 8 platform 
Microsoft’s Windows 8 platform is all geared to add in some competition in the mobile terrain. Chakrapani GK, Head - Consumer Channels Group, Microsoft says, “The beta of the next major release of Windows, code-named “Windows 8” has been confirmed for late February. Windows 8 brings a new range of capabilities without compromise – touch-first metro UI, new developer opportunities with Windows Store, new generation of hardware, just to name a few. 


AMD Radeon 7970 Review


Loaded with features and new technologies, the AMD Radeon HD 7970 is the fastest single-GPU video card you can currently buy.

Pros
  • Best-in-class video performance
  • Low all-around power usage

Cons
  • Expensive
  • Performance advantage edges off at highest resolutions
  • Requires two PCIe power connectors
  • Blocks a second expansion slot
The perpetual war for supremacy between AMD and Nvidia constantly leaves enthusiasts dodging shrapnel: When you want the best video card you can afford, why buy one now instead of waiting for the better one the competing chipset designer will undoubtedly release in a few months? This leaves reviewers in a tough spot, too, as we're constantly proclaiming that nearly every new card is the fastest ever. But because you can only live in the world you live in, we're obliged to go there. So, here goes once again: The just-released AMD Radeon HD 7970 ($549 list) is the latest fastest and most feature-rich single-GPU card ever, surpassing our previous Editors' Choice winner, the Nvidia GeForce GTX 580. 

Though we have little doubt that Nvidia will yank back that title with its next generation of cards, the 7970 is an impressive achievement for the moment.  (It's rumored to become widely available by early January of 2012.)  The inaugural member of the Southern Islands family, it utilizes a fresh architecture AMD refers to as "Graphics Core Next." Based on a new 28nm process technology and utilizing more than 4.3 billion transistors, Graphics Core Next uses a revised instruction set architecture, gives each compute unit the ability to simultaneously execute instructions from multiple kernels, and delivers an increased number of instructions per clock cycle per square millimeter of GPU space. The result, so AMD claims, is "designed for high utilization, high throughput, and multitasking."
We'll examine how well the 7970 achieves those goals in due time, but first we should look more deeply at what the card offers on a component level. The maxed-out new Southern Islands GPU (the 7900 series, code-named "Tahiti") can contain up to 32 compute units (CUs) supported by two geometry engines and rasterizers (one of each for every collection of 16 CUs), one L2 cache up to 768KB, four render back-ends (offering 32 color ROPs per clock and 128 Z/stencil ROPs per clock), and a 384-bit GDDR5 memory interface with bandwidth up to 264GBps. Cards in the 7900 series can also make full use of the newest and speediest PCI Express (PCIe) 3.0 x16 bus interface.
 
AMD didn't stop with just internal developments. The company promises that the Southern Islands cards will offer improved cooling and acoustics, by way of a new sixth-generation vapor chamber and a wider fan with new blades that are capable of wicking away more heat than before. Power issues have received plenty of attention as well, with PowerTune technology for intelligent monitoring of energy usage on an application-by-application basis when the proper electrical and thermal headroom are available.
 
Also new is ZeroCore Power Technology, which shuts down the GPU and turns off the fan during long idle states, for a reduction in idle power usage of up to 95 percent. According to AMD, this delivers additional benefits in CrossFireX configurations: Secondary GPUs are always in the ZeroCore Power state when they're not in use, with the primary GPU joining them during long idle periods, thus saving even more power in systems that traditionally suck it up with party-animal abandon.
 
Like all of the company's video cards, those in the 7900 series support DirectX 11 (and it's posed for DX11.1 when Windows 8 comes around) the full range of AMD's proprietary technologies. Eyefinity is back, but with a twist: Though it still makes for an easy way to run multiple monitors, the 7970 is the first card capable of driving three stereoscopic 3D displays by itself using new monitors that support DisplayPort 3D; the 7900 series isn't even limited to a single audio stream, but can out multiple independent streams at once. Other new Eyefinity features introduced with the Catalyst 11.10 driver update include new monitor configurations (5-by-1 landscape and portrait), full support for setups using multiple 1,920-by-1,200 and 2,560-by-1,600 monitors, and flexible bezel compensation.
 
If the 7970 sounds beefy from a spec standpoint, it is indeed. The card's 250-watt TDP hasn't changed from the 6970, but almost everything else has been dialed up. The card is driven by an astonishing 2,048 stream processors and has a 925MHz engine clock; AMD estimates the card delivers 3.79 teraflops of compute performance. Thirty-two ROPs and 128 Z/stencils max out the GPU's capability. Memory has been packed on, too, with the 7970 housing a remarkable 3GB of GDDR5, twice what the GTX 580 carries; the bandwidth is the aforementioned 264GBps, the memory clock runs at 1,375MHz, and the overall data rate is 5.5Gbps. (The last two specs are not increases over those of AMD's last-generation top single-GPU card, the Radeon HD 6970, for what it's worth.)
 
Video outputs are a strong collection as well, with two Mini DisplayPort jacks (supporting the DisplayPort 1.2 standard), one HDMI 1.4a port, and one dual-link DVI port. The last is beginning to look mighty legacy, as both the Mini DisplayPort and HDMI ports are now capable of driving the 4K displays that are almost certainly coming in the next generation or so. (AMD touts its cards as being the first on the market to support this new hardware.) And there is again a switch that lets you return to the factory settings any time you want, so you can overclock to your heart's content safe in the knowledge it will be tough to do any permanent damage.
 
Positive as all this is, the typical downsides to such a powerful card are here as well.  You will need to run two additional cables from your power supply (one eight-pin, one six-pin), and the card's oversize fan–heat sink unit means it blocks an adjacent expansion slot. But because the card is of a reasonable length (11 inches), these are minor annoyances well in keeping with video cards this high up in the enthusiast spectrum.
 
What does all this mean in terms of gaming performance? A lot. In our testing (on a system set up using an Asus P9X79 Deluxe motherboard running the Intel Core i7-3960X CPU) we saw some significant jumps over both AMD's own 6970 and Nvidia's GTX 580. The 7970's overall 3DMark 11 score was 2,734, an 861-point increase over what we saw from the 6970 (1,873) and 619 points higher than what the GTX 580 earned (2,115). The 7970 triumphed in almost all of our gaming benchmarks, often by large degrees, at least at 1,920 by 1,200. When we tested Aliens vs. Predator at that resolution, for example, the 7970's result of 55.1 frames per second (fps) was well ahead of the 6970's 47.2fps and the GTX 580's 43.6fps. The 7970 barely eked out a playable 31fps against the GTX 580's 27.2fps in Total War: Shogun 2 at 1,920 by 1,200, though the GTX 580 couldn't even run the game's benchmark with all the details cranked.
 
The 7970, it should be noted, didn't ace every test. The GTX 580 did marginally better in DiRT 3 (69.5fps versus 66.9fps) and HAWX 2 (140 versus 130), both at 1,920 by 1200. And a lot of the 7970's impressive leads dropped at 2,560 by 1,600, with only about 7fps separating the cards at Aliens vs. Predator (34.7fps versus 27.5fps), 1fps at DiRT 3 (47.7fps versus 46.7fps, the 7970 winning the competition here it couldn't quite at 1,920 by 1,200), and 12fps in Just Cause 2 (40.6fps versus 28.6fps, as compared with the wider gap between 60fps and 36.8fps for that game we saw at 1,920 by 1,200). And looked at beside either AMD's or Nvidia's more expensive dual-GPU gaming cards, the Radeon HD 6990 and the GeForce GTX 590 respectively, the 7970 looks like small performance potatoes. (Though, for the record, the GTX 590 couldn't run Total War: Shogun 2 at 2,560 by 1,600.)
 
Where the 7970 really distinguished itself was in terms of power usage. AMD's efforts in this regard really paid off, as our test bed was able to idle at an impressive minimum of 99.8 watts; that's less than we saw with either the 6970 (107.8) or the GTX 580 (117.3). But when running under full graphics load the 7970's full-system power draw rose to only 245.9 watts—again, this is below the results we got from both the 6970 (249.8 watts) and the GTX 580 (264.6 watts), and the 7970 gives you the most polygon-pushing power.
 
So, folks, it's that time again to declare a new Editors' Choice and a new "sensibly priced" (as opposed to the dual-GPU models, anyway) enthusiast video card. No matter what game you want to play or, within reason, what resolution you want to play it at, this is the one-GPU card that will excel most at the job best. Its price may still be steep, and you may be able to find GTX 580 cards on the market for less (around $500), but if full-tilt gaming without compromises is what you crave, you won't be able to do better than the AMD Radeon HD 7970. At least for a while.