Phoronix revisited the performance the HD 7950 on the new Catalyst driver for Linux as it is no longer labelled as unsupported hardware. That means that not only are the default clocks correct, you can use aticonfig/amdconfig to overclock the cards if you so desire. The scaling of the card now matches the clock speed nicely and shows an improvement from the HD 6950 in the benchmarks. You might not be able to find a Linux game which will take advantage of the full feature set and power of the HD 7950 but the card is capable of far more than providing you with pixels to slaughter.
"Here are some updated benchmarks of the AMD Radeon HD 7950 "Southern Islands" graphics card under Linux with the proprietary Catalyst driver."
Here are some more Graphics Card articles from around the web:
- AMD Radeon HD 7870 GHz Edition and HD 7850 @ X-bit Labs
- HIS Radeon HD 7870 IceQ Turbo @ Legion Hardware
- Sapphire Radeon HD 7850 Overclocked Edition Review @ Neoseeker
- MSI Radeon HD 7970 Lightning 3GB Video Cards in CrossFire Overclocked @ Tweaktown
- Sapphire HD7870 Overclock Edition @ Kitguru
- XFX Radeon HD 7870 Black Edition 2GB @ Tweaktown
- ASUS Radeon HD 7870 DirectCU II 2 GB @ techPowerUp
- MSI R7970 Lightning Radeon HD 7970 3GB Video Card Review @ Legit Reviews
- MSI HD 7870 Twin Frozr III 2 GB @ techPowerUp
- Gigabyte HD 7770 OC with CrossFire @ Bjorn3D
- Gigabyte Radeon HD 7970 OC 3GB Graphics Card Review @ eTeknix
- MSI Radeon HD 7970 Lightning @ Guru of 3D
- AMD Catalyst 12.3 Windows 7 Driver Analysis @ Tweaktown
- Graphics card buying guide @ eTeknix
- NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680 Surround Gaming Tested @ Legit Reviews
- ZOTAC GTX 680s Extreme Overclock in SLI @ Bjorn3D
- Zotac GTX680 SLI @ OC3D
- A closer look at some GeForce GTX 680 features @ The Tech Report