Aug 07
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
It’s arriving a month later than anticipated, but at least it’s arriving (we hope). According to a first look at PhysX on NVIDIA’s GeForce cards, The Tech Report is reporting (ahem) that the graphical outfit will dish out new drivers that add PhysX support on August 12th. The new software will allow owners of GeForce 8, GeForce 9 and GeForce GTX 200-series cards to use PhysX acceleration without shelling out any additional coinage, which means that you all will surely be giving it a shot just for kicks, right? Keep next Tuesday clear — you and Unreal Tournament 3 have a date, like it or not.
[Via UberReview]
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Source: Darren Murph
written by
Feb 14
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Well that was fast — just nine days after announcing plans to acquire PhysX maker Ageia, NVIDIA said today that the deal is done. Still no word on when we might see NVIDIA cards with Ageia tech in them, but we’ll let these two enjoy their first Valentine’s day as a happy couple merged corporate entity before we start asking the hard questions.
[Thanks, Ryan]
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Source: Nilay Patel
written by
Feb 04
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
After months of rumors and speculation, NVIDIA announced today that it’s acquiring Ageia and its PhysX tech. There’s no word on how much coin NVIDIA is dropping on the deal, but the company says the move makes sense, given the similarities in GPU and PPU designs and the trend towards massively parallel coprocessing units like NVIDIA’s CUDA cards. Of course, given the war of words between game devs and hardware manufacturers over the value of PPU units, it’ll be interesting to see how the industry reacts to this deal — come on, John Carmack, we know you’ve got a statement ready.
[Via FPS Labs; Thanks, Chuck]
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Source: Nilay Patel
written by
Aug 29
Filed under: Gaming, Laptops
John Carmack may
not believe in dedicated PPUs, but it seems that Dell certainly does, as IGN recently reported that the company is set to add Ageia’s new mobile PhysX PPU to its laptop line, a move that now appears to be all but confirmed by the above image residing on Ageia’s press site. The mobile PhysX PPU itself was
announced just ahead of the recent Leipzig Games Convention, and promises to offer many of the same benefits as its desktop counterpart while keeping power consumption to a minimum (10W during gameplay, according to Ageia). While there still doesn’t seem to be any official word from Dell, as IGN points out, the company’s top-end
XPS M1710 (or forthcoming
M1730) would seem to be the most likely to get the new upgrade.
[Thanks, Mack S]
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!
Source: Donald Melanson
written by
Aug 22
mobile gaming, mobile processor, MobileGaming, MobileProcessor, AgeiaPhysx100m, AgeiaPhysx, GamingLaptop, AGEIA, AGEIA PhysX, AGEIA PhysX 100M, gaming laptop
Filed under: Laptops
Although it’s been well over a year since the Ageia PhysX processor made any noise at all over on the desktop front, the firm is taking full advantage of the exposure provided at the Games Convention in Germany to unveil the PhysX 100M processor for “high-performance” gaming lappies. According to the company, this new device aims to provide “the most intensely realistic gaming and entertainment experience to PC gamers” on-the-go, but the nitty-gritty we were hoping for simply hasn’t been divulged just yet. Of course, it’s fairly safe to assume that we’ll only be seeing this unit packed within beastly gaming laptops that can’t stray far from an AC outlet, but only time will tell which manufacturer takes the bait first.
[Via ExtremeTech]
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!
Source: Darren Murph
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