Search Results For Far Cry [Extra Quality]
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Search results for far cry
As for results, the Radeon R9 290X and GeForce GTX 980 fall just below the 30 FPS minimum frame rate threshold. I consider them playable, but not especially smooth. Unfortunately, AMD's Radeon R9 295X2 suffers almost three times the frame time variance of a single Radeon R9 290X.
The 5600 XT performs well in Far Cry 6, too, matching the RTX 3060 and 2060 Super, which isn't something we can often see. Even Vega does exceptionally well here, with Vega 56 matching the GTX 1080 Ti... a bit of a "what the..." moment when I saw those results. Pascal in general appears to do badly in Far Cry 6, at least with the current driver so that might change, as the 8GB 5500 XT was able to roughly match the GTX 1080, though the 4GB 5500 XT was a lot less impressive, presumably running out of VRAM.
With DXR reflections enabled we're only looking at a 10-15% reduction in performance which explains why the effects are so hard to spot. Games with more prominent ray traced effects will see a part like the 6900 XT drop at least 40% of its original performance, so again given how small the performance hit here is, it's unsurprising that I really struggled to tell when the feature was enabled. Frankly I'd run with DXR disabled, but let's take a look at the 1440p results.
The earliest were simply a collection of resources, initially just in alphabetical order, then some introducing an internal search capability. Eventually, some began to crawl the web, while others contented themselves with using the indexes of others.
Joseph Ferrie offers the only chapter not based on the UALCS sample. He instead examines the relationship between wealth and mortality using his own linked samples of fifty counties from the 1850 population and mortality censuses, and one of eleven counties for both 1850 and 1860 with 92,079 people from both 1850 and 1860. The latter sample includes wealth data, which allowed Ferrie to test for connections from wealth to mortality. He finds strong effects of wealth to reduce mortality, but little in the way of occupational effects. He examines potential linkage biases and draws conclusions from the regression results with great care.
Sven Wilson and Clayne Pope re-examine the issue of influences on final adult heights of Union Army soldiers with more data. Their results do not comport well with the recent findings of Michael Haines, Lee Craig, and Thomas Weiss (Journal of Economic History, June 2003), who also used the UALCS as a source of height data. For example, where Wilson and Pope find a positive and significant relationship between mortality and height, Haines, Craig, and Weiss found a more conventional negative and significant relationship. Such unexpected results deserve fuller explanations than they were given here. 041b061a72