VIA and NVIDIA Working Together For PC Design 93
Vigile writes "With AMD buying up ATI and Intel working on their own discrete graphics core, it makes sense for NVIDIA and VIA to partner together. It might be surprising, though, that rather than see the rumors of NVIDIA buying VIA come true, the two companies instead agreed to 'partner' on creating a balanced PC design around VIA's Nano processor and NVIDIA's mid-range discrete graphics cards. During a press event in Taiwan, VIA showed Bioshock and Crysis running on the combined platform. They also took the time to introduce a revision to the mini-ITX standard, which Intel has adopted for Atom, that pushes an open hardware and software platform design rather than the ultra-controlled version that Intel is offering."
once more... (Score:1, Insightful)
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There, fixed.
What, you haven't been watching a lot of CG porn recently? I'm not alone.. am I?
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Two years, if it keeps progressing as it has lately. Maybe less - surely the money will start ramping up soon.
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The major problem with CGI pron is that Uncanny Valley [wikipedia.org] can take on a whole new meaning.
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There, fixed.
And yeah, you are
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as opposed to Intel's corporate agenda that tanks gaming because "businesses" don't "need" it.
Exactly, businesses do not need advanced 3d acceleration. They are businesses, the bottom line is king. (increased hardware costs, lost productivity, etc.)
Both AMD and Nvidia/VIA will put more balanced machines out there.
That is an incorrect statement since none of those companies actually sell working "machines". Instead they develop and sell components. Which aside from VIA are all comparable with one another in terms of price and performance (generally).
that a $1200 Macbook (with the fastest dual core processors out there) play games like WoW like crap
Well that's a given. Proper 3d acceleration is a must for any modern game. It should be noted my girlfriend has pr
Low watt, high performance? Seg fault (Score:3, Insightful)
However, with the way things are at the moment in the pc gamespace, I'd be pretty cautious expecting any decent performance, even with their Crysis and Bioshock demoes.
I do miss the days when games had 128 multiplayer maps, ran on cheap $200 video cards well and had more story rather than the shinies but I guess that's progress for you. *sigh*
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I wouldn't be so sure nVidia and VIA aren't on to something here.
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Shiny graphics are a waste - gameplay is king imho.
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Seconded. I've always been able to play the latest games by taking advantage of the fact that you don't need the latest and greatest to play the games. A 100 dollar budget video card will give you all the features you need, for a fraction of the price for the same card a year or two earlier.
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It would be grand to be able to buy a low watt, small box gaming machine that doesn't require 6 fans to keep it cool. However, with the way things are at the moment in the pc gamespace, I'd be pretty cautious expecting any decent performance, even with their Crysis and Bioshock demoes.
Who cares? The latest games are always written to 'barely' run on top-of-the-line consumers PC's. But who needs a box like that? For myself, I normally put together a box that is behind the latest tech a year or so, if not more. That way, you can run almost anything you want, at a fraction of what it would cost you to buy the latest & greatest. Right now I've got a box that is 2~3 years old, but it still meets minimum specs for Crysis, and Bioshock. I don't expect either of those to run smoothly, but I
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I'm glad somebody is buying cutting edge computer systems and driving the technology forward, but not as glad as I am that it isn't me.
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Whenever I build a new PC for myself, I buy just below the best. My previous PC lasted me 5 years or so, with a ti4200 (a powerhouse of a card, which will still outperform some modern 256mb cards). I'm hoping I can last as long with my current 8800GT, though I'm guessing it may be more like 4 years before I replace it.
That's the thing about buying a decent spec PC - if you buy well, you will not have to replace it for years, and you'll be able to play just about anything because everyone else is buying g
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If and only if the games in question don't use fancy shaders and whatnot that the 4200 doesn't have hardware support for, that is.
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I know, that's one of the main reasons I got a new PC. Saying that, however, the ti4200 would run games like doom3 [digital-daily.com] (un?)happily, though I never got it. I wasn't going to just upgrade the graphics card because it was AGP, and the entire system was crap by this point anyway.
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I run The Orange Box games and Oblivion on a ~$100 GeForce 8600 GT just fine at high settings and 1680x1050 resolution (although without antialiasing); what's the problem?
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May the best chip win! (Score:5, Interesting)
So great hopefully we will see some real progress and we can have affordable laptops that have OK power. Because right now most normal laptops have integrated chips (you can't really fit a video card into a normal laptop) and of course the integrated card is horrible. Also the integrated card (at least in my laptop) sucks up all the power and makes my laptop have 3x less life. Also my integrated card overheats.
So yea it would be great if we could have decent video processing on normal mass market laptops.
Good Luck and may the best chip win!
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Considering I was the first post pretty sure noone else said that.
I am just saying that any competition is good. Heck if Microsoft wanted to make a chip that would be cool
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Considering I was the first post pretty sure noone else said that.
I am just saying that any competition is good. Heck if Microsoft wanted to make a chip that would be cool
I wouldn't marrier!
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THREE is not enough! (Score:3, Insightful)
Whenever I see these "strategic partnerships" which basically means "mergers so the DOJ won't notice", I think about what's happened to the airlines and the oil companies (oh and telecom). Going in different directions, they are, but the consumers are getting screwed all around when these big outfits team up.
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I don't know about you all, but I'm not sure three entities making all the processing hardware is enough.
Well, what would you like to do about it? It's not because of lack of innovation, the problem is rather that the tick-tocks going on cost billions and billions and billions. For one smaller companies couldn't afford them, and even if we forget that it's big enough it'd have to be passed to the consumer as substantially increased prices. The only other option I see is compulsory licensing which would bring a host of problems on its own as they'd lose their biggest incentive to improve the hardware.
Besides,
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So, you think that there are only three corporate entities in the world that can put together "billions and billions"?
The problem is that even if there were EIGHT companies making processing hardware today, by next Friday there would be three again because our system rewards consolidation at the expense of innovation and certainly against the best interest of the consumer.
The system is rigged in favor of the corporat
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For users no, but AMD isn't doing so well for a long time and investors don't like to loose money, so who know how long they're still going to compete with Intel?
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Now if Nvidia and VIA gets in the game and supplants amd are at least takes a small niche it will keep intel on their toes....without competition Intel could become like microsoft. They can artificially set their prices.
Dark Ages ? I don't think. (Score:2)
Their chips are still in the dark ages and they are just barely making quad cores and more importantly 45nm processors.
Their chip aren't Dark Age at all. There are a lot of clever tricks inside. The main being the whole idea of moving the north bridge functions (memory controller) inside the CPU it self and using an open standard to communicate to the rest of the world (hypertransport). (in addition to other technical feats such as split power planes, *real* quad cores, unganged-mode bus)
Intel is only catching up with that now (with their future Quickpath technology. And it's hardly an *open* standard, given the fights wit
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Personally I would like to see Intel taken off it's high considering it delayed all their 45nm production just so they could sell out their older chips.
Umm, what? Yes, they've kept their prices high and 45nm only on the high-end to get rid of 65nm stock, but Intel would like nothing more than to switch to 45nm as fast as possible. The chips get considerably smaller and thus cheaper to produce, which translates direcfly to higher margins. Plus they get all the premium of being alone in the high-end market, another good reason to keep them stocked. I'm sure there's a lot you can blame Intel for, but I don't think this is one of them...
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But thats not the point. I have intel stuff I love intel. They compete hard but I feel right now that AMD has slipped out of the consumer market Intel is not getting as much competition. Without competition Intel can sell their chips at whatever price they feel like. I jsut think someone needs to keep intel on their toes.
And I'm not saying anything negative agai
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Open source imbalance (Score:2)
- Intel has always been a strong pusher for open source (see their graphic drivers as an example)
- AMD has too (AMD64 Linux released before the actual processor, thanks to massive help from them - and thanks to Transmeta's code-morphing to help test before the chips come to life).
And since they acquired ATI, Radeons have seen lot of open-source efforts (before acquisition was mostly reverse engineering. Now AMD is slowly releasing the necessary documentation so open source drivers can be wri
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I don't think that is likely. It would be more likely to go the other way.
My information is not up to date but I did some reading up on VIA a few years ago. They were then owned by a larger conglomerate. That conglomerate makes a lot of interlinking things. Other branches of the conglomerate make motherboards and the material used to encase CPUSs and other integrated circuits just to name 2 that I recall
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In the next
OK, OK, OK!!! (Score:3, Funny)
http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/05/31/1633214&from=rss [slashdot.org]
?
Price and availability? Can we have a laptop that has a draw on wacom style touch screen where the keyboard is? I still want a keyboard though, but I guess I could use a docking station with a monitor. Can I get it like eee size and eee cheap and put 6 of 'em together in a custom beowulf cluster that grows and shrinks as the various laptops enter and exit the house over wifi N, or wimax, or whatever?
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Actually, I hate the way processors are getting faster and faster and hungrier and hungrier.
I mean all this speed is sheer abuse! Back then I was perfectly fine with 233Mhz + 128MB RAM with Win98 and Diablo II!
All this speed is just a waste of battery life!
If they can give me a PIII-500 equivalent processor + 256MB ram + 2GB hard drive + 640x480 + ubuntu lite + 10hours battery life at $100-$200, that would be totally teh sweet!
Retrogames and emulators on Linux for TEH WIN!
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Boost it to 1600x1200 or something like that, and it'd be a lot more comfortable to work with.
Think EEE form factor (Score:1)
mix in a little WiFi capability for leeching off hotspots, and you now have a true hacker toy that can lug anywhere!
PDAs and Smartphones just don't cut it. They suck for doing stuff like coding and compiling your own programs.
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Even on an EEE-size screen, I'd still want more pixels. It's 2008, for crying out loud; why can't we finally get 300DPI?!
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So get a core solo and don't worry about the 4 watts that they might be able to save by gutting performance.
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Actually, I hate the way processors are getting faster and faster and hungrier and hungrier.
Umm... don't know if you've been following the processor market recently, but they're not. A lot of the advances recently have been about lower voltages, lower power consumption, and more cores. Pure processor power increase has most definately not been a feature of the recent processor market, at least not compared to the past. I mean, AMD released over 2ghz processors 6 years ago....
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Umm... (Score:4, Funny)
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Re: beowolf cluster of mini laptops on wireless (Score:1)
Ever hear of Smart Dust? [wikipedia.org]
That's almost exactly what they're trying to achieve.
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PS Oh, can you install regular Urban Terror on each machine, too, so I have a 6 chair death match out of the box? Double Thanks in Advance. Might as well put a racing game on there too and bundle each with a dual analog stick. Thank
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WTF would you do with a beowolf cluster of mini laptops on wireless?
With a beowulf cluster, where you have to rework your applications, or operate them on a job-submission basis at which point you might as well just use DQS? Nothing.
However, with a single-system-image cluster like MOSIX, and with binary compatibility across architectures, you could use the system to do all kinds of things transparently.
However again, my understanding is that OpenMOSIX is more or less over (I would love to be corrected.) And even if it isn't you need everything to be the same architectur
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Wouldn't it make more sense to put the Wacom digitizer where the screen is?
Also, I second the motion for a cheap, small tablet PC!
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I own a tablet PC, and no, I don't think he wants one in its current form, because no tablet PC is small or cheap. They're all expensive, and even the ones with small screens are absurdly thick and heavy. No, what he's asking for -- and what I'd want, too -- would be a convertible tablet (i.e., including keyboard) with about a 6" by 8" 1024x768 screen, <= 2lbs, <= $500, <=
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I own a tablet PC, and no, I don't think he wants one in its current form, because no tablet PC is small or cheap.
But then what he wants is a "lighter, cheaper tablet PC" :P
I think the hinge is just a problem. If I need a keyboard I can carry a snazzy folding one in my pocket - I have big pockets. I already have a serial one for handspring visor that I intend to hack for use with everything else (well, that has rs232 anyway. they have bluetooth ones these days.) I want the ultimate durability and that would ideally mean something sealed in plastic. The battery would be external and would connect to the only electric
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The problem with that is that it becomes harder to use it as a laptop: what do you prop up the screen with?
"Potential" solutions are useless. I've actually tried using Linux on my tablet. The digitizer itself works great; that's not the problem. The problem is that there are no apps! There is no open-source continuo
*Swoons* (Score:2, Interesting)
Will nvidia make chipsets for via as via ones suck (Score:2)
open source drivers? (Score:1)
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You're kidding, right?
So far VIA has been terrible with Linux. I've had much better experiences with Nvidia, even with their closed-source drivers. This talk about VIA being open in comparison to Intel is funny, considering Intel has provided opensource Linux drivers for their hardware for years.
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Have they? I always thought it was their publically available hardware specifications that allowed anyone to write drivers. It's just when they got into the graphics chip business that they lacked documentation and had to then provide drivers. Now Intel is releasing the source to the graphics drivers, and providing the graphic chipset documentation, a great
Improve OLPC design and sell it for $200 (Score:1)
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The best feature of the XO is the Marvell-based WiFi (which currently does not have Free or even Open firmware) which implements a Mesh AP on a chip. This allows the device to operate as a repeater while draining the absolute minimum power. The only way we are going to achieve independence from the greedy corporations trying to milk the internet for every penny is if we make them irrelevant. The way to do that is to build an alternative internet. And the only cost-effective way to do that at the moment is w
he spelled it right... (Score:1)
wow.
He used and spelled "discrete" correctly.
wow.
ummm... the story? yeah, sure.
Whatever.
He used and spelled "discrete" correctly.
VIA tries to redefine Open as "Ours" (Score:5, Interesting)
BTW, I have to laugh at the sight of a Mini-ITX board with a relatively low power VIA cpu having a huge, power sucking NVidia discrete GPU board on it. Surely anybody that cares about performance graphics is not using this catagory of board. Logically , NVidia would do an integrated graphics chipset for the Mini-ITX format, but a PCI-Express external card that quadruples the chassis height (and probably quads the power consumption of the board) is a joke. Ask embedded systems developers (still the main market for Mini-ITX systems) if this is really what they're looking for. VIA and NVidia cobbled together a frankenstein combination of technologies just to make the Atom look bad with irrelevant perf specs.
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Hmmm, the old Mini-ITX format had multiple vendors (VIa, Intel, others) using it and right now the only vendor using Mini-ITX 2.0 is VIA-NVidia. How is this more open?
By the fact that vendors wanting to implement it don't have to pay royalties to anybody. That is what "open" means. You don't necessarily need several vendors using them, you need vendors having no big barrier to start using them.
And in what sense was Intel making the old standard less open -other than jumping into that market and doing well?
Here I agree with you. Intel's Mini-ITX has no fundamental reason of being less open. (Unless they're charging license fees for their improvements).
BTW, I have to laugh at the sight of a Mini-ITX board with a relatively low power VIA cpu having a huge, power sucking NVidia discrete GPU board on it.
Still the whole platform is projected to cost less than any Intel offering able to run Vista.
And I presume the whole VIA / NVidia c
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Maybe what they're referring to as far as "open" (but they're using the word loosely) is that intel doesn't want people to use its cheap atom chip to build systems that can compete in the same market segment with their more pricey offerings. That's what would keep an OEM from outfitting a system any way they want to.
This VIA/nVidia system that does have enough graphics performance to beat the atom and (they claim) to play recent games is bas