Thanks for your suggestions: you exactly hit the spot I'm struggling onto: the RESULTS after you upgrade to another card with spending a lot of cash.
As I wrote in my first post, I use a LOT of photoshop and, for doing animations, After Effect (that would improve with quadro 4000) and Apple Motion. I guess that AE would benefit a lot from quadro (because of CUDA) while Motion will remain more or less the same (because of OPEN CL)... right?
But if it's all about CUDA cores, as you say, I begin to not see (if I don't understand other features) the reason for spending 700 eur / $$ for an old card when I can get another with a lot more of CUDA cores for the same price (or maybe even a bit less?).
Plus, I see that the EVGA 680 has two dvi port, that is good 'cause I use a cintiq and a cinema display 23", so I could connect both without adapters.
UPDATE: I noticed just now that the other connection is a DVI DIGITAL... so the adapter is required anyway
Thank you so much for your suggestion
![Big Grin :D :D](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
giovanni
The quadro 4000 card is an older card that has been introduced years ago.
The big difference in cuda cores tells you that. You are right with your assessment that the EVGA 680 is more of an all-good-around card and not dedicated only to the "professional" market.
However in my personal opinion, this is all pure marketing. Only a very small amount of people need that bit of unique features from a quadro card really. If you do heavy CAD stuff, than you shoot for the quadro, especially when you use Catia V5/V6 or ProE from various companies such as Dassault. If not, you may go another smarter route. If money is not an obstacle have a look here:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...ption=Nvidia+Quadro+K5000+mac&N=-1&isNodeId=1
The smart-underground-geek route would be this:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/Nvidia-GTX-...880?pt=PCC_Video_TV_Cards&hash=item4d20028538
A review from 2011 (!) of the Quadro 4000:
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2011/0...-nvidias-sole-mac-offering-a-promising-start/
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Thank you very much for your analysis: if I have to be honest I didn't noticed almost any upgrading since I installed the 5770... but I spent a lot less than I would for a quadro... and if I'd have the same experience my disappointment would be a looooot worse
Yes, I refer to the 2gb quadro... again, if the CUDA cores in the EVGA 680 are more than in the QUADRO I could use OCTANE RENDER at better speed, and performance in AE and Premiere would be good as for the quadro, right?
I'm almost convinced to take the EVGA 680 instead of quadro... now I can't really tell the differences if not the power consumption, that seems lower in the quadro.
Maybe the CUDA CORES in EVGA 680 can't be used as native in bootcamp (maybe I could use it for some 3d app that runs only on windows)?
Hi Stepka. The Quadro 4000 you are referring to is the model that came out in 2011 with 2 gig ram?
http://arstechnica.com/apple/2011/0...-nvidias-sole-mac-offering-a-promising-start/
It's the single slot card that only requires one power cable. To compare with the Radeon 5770Hd as reference, for Photoshop, illustrator, Flash the difference will be minimal or sometimes not too noticeable. But for After Effects, Premier Pro the Quadro 4000 will be faster. I don't work on 3D graphics or Cinema 4D but I think the Quadro 4000 performs well with 3D work. This card's strength is in 3D rendering.
The Nvidia 680GTX Mac Edition card mentioned is a good card and will work on your 2008 Mac Pro. It's quick and responsive. When I work on large posters or streamers or multi layered Photoshop files, the Radeon 5770 sometimes struggles when I edit or navigate thru the layout. While the 680GTX provides a smoother flow with the same large layouts
Image
From a price point, some are saying the Quadro 4000 is expensive for little gain in performance that most people go for the GeForce series. I think generally the 680GTX is faster than the Quadro 4000
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Hi, thanks for the suggestions... I didn't know that I could keep my 5770 to let it live with the Quadro... I thought the driver would go mad together with a lot of conflicts... did you ever experienced anything like that on your mac mounting both cards?
p.s. So you got a quadro 4000 for free? You're a lucky fella!!!
![Big Grin :D :D](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
I've got (as my sig testifies) a 5770 driving my monitors and a 4000 for compute. It's an older card, so for certain stuff like CUDA newer cards will definitely smoke it.
However one big pro of the card that I count as a plus in my rig is that it's only a single slot compared to basically every card that's usually a 2-slotter.
If you're going to swap out your current 3870 and keep the 5770, I'd go for the 4000 if you get a good price (mine was free, since I'm using a sample Nvidia sent us to work and never wanted back
![Big Grin :D :D](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
)
But if you want to swap both cards a GTX seems a solid and substantial replacement.
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So do you guys think if I mount the EVGA 680, could I keep my ATI 5770 in another slot?
Or the fact the EVGA 680 requires two slots means that I have to keep only this one as card?
Thanks for all the help