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When we cranked up the resolution, used the Ultra High Quality settings, and turned on 2X anti-aliasing in our Quake test, we saw the new GeForce GT 120-powered models displaying nearly twice the number of frames per second as the Radeon HD 2600 XT. The two eight-core systems, for example, posted virtually identical scores when running both Quake 4 and Call of Duty 4 time demos at 1,024-by-768 resolution. Comparing the game results between the new standard Mac Pros andĢ008’s standard Mac Pro model ( ) featuring two Quad-Core Harpertown processors running at 2.8GHz and ATI Radeon HD 2600XT graphics with 256MB of GDDR video memory, we don’t see much of a difference when running games at relatively low resolutions and settings. $3,299 Eight-Core 2.26GHz Nehalem model) ship with Nvidia GeForce GT120 graphics with 512MB of GDDR3 video memory. $2,499 Quad-Core 2.66GHz Nehalem model and a
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