HardwareCeBIT 2008: Gigabyte - The Fan Becomes a Useless Argument.
Gigabyte has a good example of the unbearable marketing trend that wants to take the smallest thing and turn it into a marketing argument. Even though the manufacturer built most of its reputation on graphic cards using passive and silent cooling systems, it now boasts a "3D active fan" as a major feature on of its graphic cards. What are the arguments? The fan is energy saver and a shield! In fact, itò€™s the opposite. Adding a fan will increase power consumption (in a relatively small manner, usually between 1 W to 3 W) and adds to the list of possible failures. To top it up, the fan is installed on a GeForce 8500 GT, an entry level card running modest performances and perfectly capable of using a humble heat sink (itò€™s the case with other manufacturers)!
To be fair, letò€™s add that this "intelligent" fan has the particularity of starting when in peak. The initiative reminds us of a similar MSI feature weò€™ll look at later on. However, Gigabyte doesnò€™t even use it to overclock the card, hence this fan doesnò€™t appear to have one ounce of relevance.
Fortunately, we were able to get closer to the passive GeForce 9600 GT of the manufacturer. Hereò€™s a much more interesting model but with a really massive heat sink with fin that cross over the back of the case.
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