Unfortunately for the GTX 480 the general consensus is:
► Too hot
► Too Noisy
► Too power hungry
► Too Expensive
► Too little performance advantage
► Too little, too late
As it stands, ultimately the card is a massive disappointment. The rumors of it's problematic birth came to fruition.
Yup, that sums up the GTX 480 pretty well. The "too noisy" and "too little performance advantage" are the number one reasons why I'm not bothering with it. My GTX 295 is a dual-GPU card and yet it runs cooler than this GTX 480 nuclear device.

(...) the Radeon HD 6000 series, coming out later this year, will feature a new core revision as well.
Nice, I will be waiting for that.
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit RTMIntel Core i7 920 (D0), overclocked @ 3.6GHz ...6GB of OCZ DDR3-1600 triple channel @ 7-7-7-20EVGA GTX 295 Co-Op
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- custom build
- OS
- Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit RTM
- CPU
- Intel Core i7 920 (D0), overclocked @ 3.6GHz (4.2GHz stable)
- Motherboard
- EVGA X58 A1
- Memory
- 6GB of OCZ DDR3-1600 triple channel @ 7-7-7-20
- Graphics Card(s)
- EVGA GTX 295 Co-Op
- Sound Card
- Auzentech X Meridian 7.1
- Monitor(s) Displays
- (3x) Samsung 943BX, (1x) Samsung 2333HD, (1x) BenQ FP202W
- Screen Resolution
- 3840x1024 + 1920x1080 + 1680x1050
- Hard Drives
- (4x) OCZ Vertex 30GB SATA2 SSDs on RAID 0 for 120GB total
(2x) Western Digital Black 1TB SATA2 on RAID 0
(1x) Lite-on DVD Burner and Blu-Ray player
- PSU
- PC Power & Cooling Super-quiet Silencer 910
- Case
- (modified) Tagan Black Pearl full tower, WCR edition
- Cooling
- Scythe Mugen2 CPU cooler, (5x) Scythe SFF21F, Zalaman cntrl.
- Keyboard
- Logitech G19
- Mouse
- Logitech G9x
- Internet Speed
- Comcast Cable, 22Mbps down and 5Mbps up
- Other Info
- Logitech Z-5500 Digital speaker system