It's good news for those who already have one or two 200 series card. I agree that it's not an attractive solution performance and price wise for a new setup.
Yeah. I picked up a 4870X2 when they were going for £230, as that was a killer deal. >GTX285 performance for upwards of £100 less. I wouldn't really feel like a technological step backwards if I upgraded (and they're still very pricy...) so wouldn't want to go the GT200 route for 3DVS, which would make it an expensive option. About the only place I could save money would be on the screens, but that would be more than made up for on the necessity of two GPUs and whatever else was needed for them.
But for those already loaded with GT200 SLI, the backwards compatibility is an awesome draw. :D
Yea, an acronym for it. 3D Vision Surround is a crappy name imho. What is up with that name anyways? I can tell nVidia marketing hasn't touched that name yet, because it would have been something easier to use. Maybe they're too busy branding entry level G92's as 300-series to bother with a cool surround capability name. :nudgenudge
Well, what new stuff (other than cards) have nVidia come out with in recent years? I can't really think of anything other than '3D Vision'... which again while descriptive isn't exactly something that 'flows off the tongue' the way "EyeFinity" does. You can level the same at "TripleHead2Go"... it's descriptive, and 'modern' in the 'need to insert numbers in place of words' way, but doesn't grab you and shout "PAY ATTENTION!" PhysX was descriptive
and stood out, as a play on words... but nVidia didn't come up with it. Ageia did.
Ultimately, while the name is a little uninspired, and don't have the 'one word snap' of EyeFinity, they could call it a host of unimaginative stuff and as long as it still did as advertised, I'd not be complaining. ;)