If you wish to attach three monitors, and none of these has a DisplayPort connector, you should consider the "Sapphire FleX" series. It has the DP->DVI adapter onboard and supports 3x DVI/HDMI at the same time. It's a bit more expensive than comparable cards, but cheaper than paying 50 bucks for a separate active adapter.
Depends. My workspace and light 3D apps work fine with radeon here, so does marble. Haven't tried google earth or the GIS systems you mention.
Unigine likely won't run at reasonable speeds on radeon. Not sure about fglrx, haven't used it in quite a while.
doubtful. Multi-GPU-rendering on linux is a mess. You can either:
* have 3d-acceleration on all monitors, the ability to drag windows across monitors, but suffer from performance problems and bugs with compositing. (Xinerama mode)
* have 3d-acceleration on all monitors and few issues with anything, but forfeit the ability to drag windows between monitors belonging to different cards. (Xaphod mode)
There's also work being done to allow rendering on one GPU and forwarding the framebuffer to a cheap secondary card for displaying, but that's very unlikely to hit major distros by january. It's also unlikely to work with nvidia's proprietary drivers.
I'm not sure about the windows side for gaming. IIRC eyefinity-spans across monitors with different resolutions aren't possible, but regular multi-monitor mode is (i.e. it works exactly like on nvidia, just without the additional eyefinity-features).


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