Oct 17

Filed under:

We know the past couple years haven’t been kind to VIA-owned S3 Graphics — market share has declined, and NVIDIA and ATI keep introducing fancy new technologies, making it tough to keep up. That said, we’re inspired by S3’s ardent attempts to stay relevant in an industry that won’t easily make room for small competitors. The latest case in point: the company has released a photo-editing app to demonstrate the newly-programmed GPGPU (general-purpose computing on graphics processing units) functionalities of its DirectX 10.1 Chrome 400 line of discrete graphics cards. S3 claims its hard work has produced an HPC environment that can be used to reduce processing time for scientific and other applications from days to seconds — we’ll believe it when we see it, but you’ve gotta admire the tenacity.

[Via CustomPC]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Samuel Axon

written by

Oct 17

Filed under: ,

Check it Donnie, Nvidia just launched its Quadro CX accelerator card for Adobe’s Creative Suite 4. The optimized GPU fits into your PC’s PCIe slot to smooth image navigation and manipulation in Photoshop while accelerating effects in Adobe’s After Effects and Premier Pro. Nvidia claims that the new GPU helps encode H.264 video at “lightning-fast speeds” when using Nvidia’s Cuda-enabled CS4 plug-in while giving professionals accurate video previews with uncompressed 30-bit color or 10-/12-bit SDI (for professional video equipment) before final output. The Quadro CX features a 1.5GB (GDDR3) frame buffer and 76.8GBps memory bandwidth with dual-DisplayPort connectors (up to 2560 x 1600 pixels) and a single dual-link DVI with support for panels up to 3,840 x 2,400 @24Hz. Look, we know this sounds all stupid-hard advanced to those of you using Photoshop to hotten-up your Facebook pic, but the pros are going to love it. $1,999 and available today — video demonstration just beyond the read link.

[Via InformationWeek]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Thomas Ricker

written by

Aug 20

Filed under:

Putting it simply, Lucid’s goal with its HYDRA technology is to “build a completely GPU-independent graphics scaling technology” which enables two completely different cards to work together in harmony with “little to no software overhead.” Let that sink in a minute. Now that a puzzled look has surely overtaken your face, we’d strongly recommend hitting the read link for a (very) detailed look at the technology, an explanation of how it works and even a few hard hitting questions addressed to the company. We’re trying to stifle our excitement here, but are hopes are escalating quickly.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Darren Murph

written by

Aug 07

Filed under: ,

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]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Darren Murph

written by

Jul 05

Filed under: ,

An external graphics card that’s actually nearing release? Be still our hearts! Fujitsu Siemens’ recently leaked external unit, which will be based on ATI XGP technology, is actually really, really close to hitting retail — according to a piece over at Fudzilla, anyway. Slated to be titled Lasso, the RV670-based device should be more than enough to handle basic tasks, but unfortunately, benchmarks were off limits. On the upside, digital photography was not, so head on down to the read link for a few more snaps.

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Darren Murph

written by

Jun 04

Filed under: ,

AMD’s on a roll at Computex, and it’s keeping the stream alive with two more decently important announcements. First off, the company is making the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3800 official, which is said to “triple top-of-the-line graphics performance in comparison to the previous generation ATI Mobility Radeon GPUs.” The unit also enables laptop makers to include CrossFireX technology for the first time, so yeah, there’s that. Moving on, we’ve got the low down on its PowerXpress technology, which enables users to “double or triple the performance of the integrated graphics processor when plugged into a wall socket or extend their battery life by over an hour while on the go.” In actuality, it’s a variant of ATI Hybrid Graphics Technology for lappies, giving folks the option to switch between a Mobility Radeon HD 3400 series GPU and an integrated AMD M780G without the need for a reboot. If your eyebrows just perked up, you can snag said tech on select Fujitsu-Siemens machines right now. All the gory details are linked below — enjoy!

Read - ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3800 gets official
Read - ATI PowerXpress shipping on select Fujitsu-Siemens laptops

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Darren Murph

written by

Apr 26

Filed under:

Alright, we’re loving this new hyper-aggressive, sorta-nasty version of NVIDIA. Not only has CEO Jen Hsun-Huang promised to “open a can of whoop-ass” on Intel, the company has been touting its new sub-$45 integrated platform as far superior to Celeron-based systems, and now we’ve got VP of Content Relations Roy Taylor sending out emails saying that “a war has started” and pronouncing the Intel CPU “dead.” Roy says Intel is “panicking” because CPUs have “run out of steam,” and that they “no longer make anything run faster.” According to Roy — whose nickname is “Big Pipe,” no joke — the only thing that needs to get faster is the GPU, and NVIDIA’s going to make it happen. That’s some brash talk, all around — let’s hope NVIDIA’s ready when Intel brings Nehalem out to play. Check out the whole email at the read link.

[Via TGDaily]

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Source: Nilay Patel

written by

Mar 04

Filed under: ,

AMD’s deliverance of two 45-nanometer CPUs wasn’t the only thing new from the company today, as now we’re getting wind of an all new motherboard GPU that’s DirectX10 compatible. The AMD 780 Series is hailed as “the industry’s most advanced” mobo GPU, and is slated to be “widely available” in a variety of boards in Q2. Essentially, AMD’s hoping the chip will enable casual gamers to join in on the fun without having to fork out big bucks for pricey discrete graphics cards, but for those that eventually do pick up such a device, the ATI Hybrid Graphics technology ensures that the power from both will be harnessed in order to boost overall performance. Check out the read link for all the nitty-gritty, and head on past the break if you’re scouting a couple of educational videos.Continue reading AMD unveils DirectX10-compatible 780 Series motherboard GPU

 

Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments


Source: Darren Murph

written by