Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Gainward announced the release of BLISS 9600GT Golden Sample graphics card

Gainward announced the release of BLISS 9600GT Golden Sample graphics card

The world’s first graphics card supports the most advanced four display outputs

Gainward, officially announced its first 9 series card - BLISS 9600GT golden sample graphics card to the market. BLISS 9600GT uses the NVIDIA GeForce 9600GT graphics chip and 512MB DDR3 256bit memory, and supports PCI-express 2.0. Equipped with a 700Mhz core clock, 2000Mhz memory clock, and 64 units of stream processors, BLISS 9600GT golden sample can completely run the latest DX10 games and can deliver the most unbelievable gaming experience.

The World’s first graphics card supports DisplayPort, HDMI, Dual-Link DVI-I, and CRT outputs

BLISS 9600GT golden sample supports the most advanced DisplayPort and HDMI output whose resolution can be up to 2560*1600 and 1920*1080. Furthermore, the mainstream Dual-Link DVI-I and CRT (via the DVI-to-D-Sub dongle) is supported in BLISS 9600GT golden sample. BLISS 9600GT golden sample is HDCP compliant and supports NVIDIA PureVideo HD and H.264 decode. You can choose either DisplayPort or HDMI output to connect to the monitor, and then you can start to enjoy the ultimate Blu-ray and HD-DVD movie experience.


The Innovative Silent Cooler

The innovative cooling solution of BLISS 9600GT golden sample includes a copper base, aluminum fins, and a 2 ball bearing fan with PWM control, ensuring lower noise level and longer lifetime. The two heat pipes also help heat transmitting, especially equalizing the heat to a whole cooler without gathering the heat in the bottom of it. Keep the cool and stable working environment even if the card is in full loading.

Smart Control Utility - EXPERTool

Gainward’s unique EXPERTool is smart and easy control software which allows users to monitor GPU’s temperature and fan speed. The fan speed and GPU/Shader/memory clock are also adjustable in the EXPERTool. The native alert tool is the best doorkeeper when the GPU’s temperature is over the warning value and to inform users to clock down the settings or turn off your PC to prevent from damaging the card.

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