October 22nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops
Now that NVIDIA’s GeForce 9400M has made its debut in Apple’s new MacBooks, Technical Marketing Director Nick Stam says that five major notebook vendors are planning to ship systems with the chipset — though we don’t know if that includes Apple or not. Stam expects NVIDIA will carve out 30 percent of the integrated graphics market for itself, partly by improving other experiences besides games — Google Earth, photo editing, day-to-day video encoding, and other activities performed by people who use keys besides W, A, S, and D. Frankly, we’re just thankful we’ve evolved past the days when we needed a 19-inch monster to perform high-impact 3D tasks without sacrificing to the sinister gods of screen tearing.
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Posted in nvidia, geforce, market share, MarketShare, integrated, chipset, laptops, notebooks, integrated graphics, IntegratedGraphics, NvidiaGeforce9400M, 9400M, Geforce9400M, geforce 9400m, nick stam, nvidia geforce 9400m, nvidiageforce | No Comments »
October 22nd, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops
It’s been awhile (or a long while, in the case of the ARES CG6155) since we’ve heard about these machines, but ASUS has at long last decided to start shipping ‘em to retailers. The aforesaid gaming desktop still doesn’t have a publicly available price tag, but ASUS assures us that it’s out there now for those who know where to look. Thankfully, it was a bit (and we stress “bit”) more forthcoming with details on the G50 and G71 gaming notebooks, which are also available as we speak for $1,249.99 and take-your-best-guess, respectively.
Read - ASUS ARES CG6155
Read - ASUS G50 and G71
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Posted in nvidia, price, pricing, asus, gaming PC, GamingPc, G71, physx, cuda, gtx 280, Gtx280, ARES, CG6155, 9700M GT, 9700mGt, g50 | No Comments »
October 21st, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops
Look out, Alienware / Voodoo — a formidable opponent just rolled in, and it appears that some prankster stuck a Toshiba logo on whatever machine is hiding underneath. All jesting aside, Tosh is revamping its — shall we say, vivid — Qosmio X305 by introducing the Qosmio X305-Q708, which houses a potent Core 2 Extreme QX9300 CPU, 4GB of DDR3 RAM, a 128GB SSD, 320GB 7,200 RPM SATA drive, dual-layer DVD writer, twin NVIDIA 512MB GeForce 9800M GTS graphics cards, 802.11b/g/n WiFi, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR and Windows Vista Ultimate. You’ll also find a full-sized keyboard with a ten-key number pad, four Harman Kardon speakers, HDMI / DisplayPort connectors, 1.3-megapixel webcam, Wireless USB / USB Sleep-and-Charge technologies and a 17-inch TruBrite LCD (though resolution remains a mystery). It should be available any moment for around $4,199.99, but we’d factor in a few extra hundies to have Colorware blot out the putrid “fiery Fusion” finish (seen better after the break).
Continue reading Toshiba gets serious with $4k Qosmio X305-Q708 gaming laptop
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Posted in nvidia, sli, toshiba, laptop, core 2 extreme, Core2Extreme, gaming laptop, GamingLaptop, ssd, Qosmio, core 2 quad, Core2Quad, x305, X305-Q708 | No Comments »
October 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Displays

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]
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Posted in nvidia, adobe, photoshop, GPU, cuda, creative suite, creative suite 4, CreativeSuite, CreativeSuite4, cs4, gddr3, quadro cx, QuadroCx | No Comments »
October 17th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Displays

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]
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Posted in nvidia, adobe, photoshop, GPU, cuda, creative suite, creative suite 4, CreativeSuite, CreativeSuite4, cs4, gddr3, quadro cx, QuadroCx | No Comments »
October 16th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming
Not like NVIDIA really needed to waste the ink here, but it has decided to hover under the spotlight a bit more by officially introducing its GeForce 9400M GPU. Yeah, the same one Apple made official on its behalf yesterday. The single-chip design features 16 parallel processing cores, 54GFLOPs of processing power and promises 5x the graphics power over Intel’s Centrino 2. In other words, this thing will come a lot closer to handling Crysis in a satisfactory manner than that lowly integrated set you’re probably working with now. But you already knew that, now didn’t you?
[Via Physorg]
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Posted in nvidia, geforce, graphics, GPU, 9400 M, 9400M, GeForce 9400 M, Geforce9400M | No Comments »
October 15th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Gaming, Media PCs

Alright, something’s fishy here. When Apple announced that the new MacBook Pro has two NVIDIA GeForce chips — the 9400M and the 9600M GT — the focus was on what that means for battery life. Absent any mention of Hybrid SLI, we assumed that was all, but PC Mag has posted some eyebrow-raising benchmarks comparing the new MacBook Pro to HP’s Pavilion HDX16t, which also features a 9600M GT. While the MacBook Pro test model fell behind the Pavilion in most benchmarks due to its slower processor, its Crysis framerate beat that of the Pavilion by 24.1 frames per second — 41.9 over 17.3. That doesn’t make a lot of sense, unless you look at benchmarks of a desktop with NVIDIA’s similar GeForce 9300 chipset and a GeForce 8500 GT — turns out Crysis runs 12.63 frames per second faster (29.19 over 16.56) in Hybrid SLI than it does on the 8500 GT alone. Is the MacBook Pro running in SLI mode when set for performance? We don’t have confirmation of that, but we’ll put it to the test in our forthcoming review — until then, feel free to grab a grain of salt while freaking out anyway.
Update: Sorry, folks — NVIDIA’s just posted a support doc that says the MBP doesn’t support Hybrid SLI in either OS X or Windows — and when running Windows, it’s locked into using the 9600M GT. We’re not sure where that Crysis boost is coming from — GDDR3 vs GDDR2, perhaps — but we’ll dig deeper in our review. Stay tuned.
Read - PC Mag (MacBook Pro benchmarks)
Read - Hot Hardware (NVIDIA GeForce 9300 desktop motherboards benchmarks)
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Posted in Apple, nvidia, sli, geforce, graphics, macbook pro, MacbookPro, GPU, chipset, benchmarks, integrated graphics, HybridSli, geforce 9300, geforce 9400, geforce 9600, Geforce9600, MBP, geforce 8500, geforce8500, igp, macbook-pro | No Comments »
October 14th, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops

As expected, Apple has tapped NVIDIA’s new GeForce 9400 M as the base graphics for its new MacBook, MacBook Pro, and updated MacBook Air, which Steve Jobs himself says is five times faster than the current Intel integrated graphics they’ve been using. That’s aided in no small part by the chipset’s 16 parallel graphics cores, not to mention a generally beefier GPU that occupies a full 70% of the die area. If that’s not enough for you, Apple is also throwing NVIDIA’s 9600M GT into the MacBook Pro, which’ll give you two GPUs and either 256MB or 512MB of memory. That power will unsurprisingly come at the expense of some battery life, however, with the 9600 cutting things back to four hours from the five hours you can expect with the discrete GPU switched off. In the Q&A after the announcement, Apple also confirmed that it’d be the first taking the chipset to market, but that anything further is up to NVIDIA. Expect to hear more about that tomorrow, when NVIDIA is supposedly making its own announcement.
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Posted in Apple, nvidia, breaking news, BreakingNews, macbook, macbook pro, MacbookPro, macbook air, MacbookAir, 9600M GT, 9600mGt, nvidia geforce 9400 m, nvidia geforce 9600m gt, NvidiaGeforce9400M, NvidiaGeforce9600mGt | No Comments »
October 13th, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Elcomsoft has been using NVIDIA’s CUDA GPU computing architecture to accelerate its Distributed Password Recovery tool for a while now, but it looks like the latest version of the cracking utility takes it to the next level — it can break a WPA2 password using two GeForce GTX 280-based boards 100 times faster than with just a CPU. It’s still a brute-force crack, but only a few packets need be sniffed, and the GPU accelerates the algorithm used to generate keys significantly — even laptop-grade 8800M and 9800M GPUs speed things up 10 to 15 times. We wouldn’t worry too much about wardrivers with trunk-mounted bladeservers going nuts, however — the base version of the software costs $599, and things ramp up to $5,000 pretty quickly.
[Via HotHardware]
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Posted in nvidia, wifi, wpa, cuda, distributed password recovery, DistributedPasswordRecovery, elcomsoft, elcomsoft distributed password recovery, ElcomsoftDistributedPasswordRecovery, password crack, PasswordCrack, wifi crack, WifiCrack, wpa2 | No Comments »
October 12th, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops
Well the rumoratti has certainly been working overtime today when it comes to Apple, so we’ve decided to bundle all the news that’s currently doing the rounds into one tasty and nutritious post.
First up, there are new — and quite detailed — pictures out of what appears to be those MacBook and MacBook Pro casings we saw during the week. Again, we can’t 100 percent confirm that these are the real deal, but they certainly have that Air-meets-MacBook hybrid quality to them that would suggest we’re looking at the next iteration of the line.
Secondly, Apple has gone and published a support document for the “MacBook/MacBook Pro (Late 2008)” — which suggests (gasp!) that there might be some late 2008 refreshes in our future. Oh really? Weird.
Rounding out the excitement, AppleInsider “confirms” the rumor that the new MacBooks will jettison the integrated Intel graphics which previous models have used in favor of NVIDIA’s MCP79 platform. The new GPUs apparently use a new set of GeForce 9300 and 9400 chips that will make previous performance look archaic by comparison. Additionally, according to hotshot Mac rumor specialist Kevin Rose, the new systems will support Blu-ray drives, thus finally allowing you to watch season 4 of Lost the way the lord intended it.
As with all rumors, you can never really know which one of these is going to stick, but luckily we won’t have to wait very long to get to the bottom of it. In the meantime, feel free to peruse the various links below and soak in the sweet, sweet gossip.
[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]
Read - Leaked MacBook / MacBook Pro casing photos
Read - Apple Document Confirms MacBook/MacBook Pro (Late 2008)
Read - Apple dumping Intel chipsets for NVIDIA’s in new MacBooks
Read - Kevin Rose drops MacBook Blu-Ray Rumor at Live Diggnation event
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Posted in Apple, nvidia, Blu-ray, rumor, rumors, speculation, macbook, macbook pro, MacbookPro, spy photos, SpyPhotos, leaked photos, leaked pictures, LeakedPhotos, LeakedPictures, spy shots, SpyShots, kevin rose, KevinRose, leaked pics, LeakedPics, mcp79, rumor roundup, RumorRoundup | No Comments »
October 10th, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops

With a new MacBook announcement now just days away, speculation is unsurprisingly at a fever pitch as to exactly what Apple has in store, and the folks at PC Perspective have now pieced together a few clues to whet your appetite in anticipation of the big event. Most of those are drawn from mounting evidence from the NVIDIA camp, including the image above that made an appearance on the company’s website a few days ago and, most importantly, word that NVIDIA would be releasing its GeForce 9400 and 9300 chipsets based on the MCP79 integrated chipset design on October 15th (conveinently not stepping on Apple’s toes the day before). The implication there being that the GeForce chipsets would replace the relatively underpowered integrated Intel graphics on the current MacBooks, with the new MacBook Pros supposedly getting an additional boost from a discrete G92-based mobility GeForce 9600. As PC Perspective points out, if true, that would be quite a coup for NVIDIA, especially considering that it wasn’t all that long ago some were talking about it quitting the chipset business altogether.
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Posted in Apple, nvidia, geforce, macbook, macbook pro, MacbookPro, g92, geforce 9300, geforce 9400, geforce 9600, Geforce9300, Geforce9400, Geforce9600, mcp79 | No Comments »
October 10th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops
Really, eMachines? You’re honestly going to give your newest cheap-o PC this kind of tagline? Truth be told, we’re not exactly sure what a standard sized dictionary even looks like (there’s this thing called the internet…), but apparently, it’s exactly the same size as the EL1200 desktop. Not sassy enough to be called a nettop, this here mini-tower is 40% smaller and 55% lighter than the company’s second tiniest rig, and while it won’t handle the likes of Crysis, it shouldn’t have too many issues surfing the web and opening Word documents. As for specs, we’ve got a 1.5GHz AMD Athlon 2650e 64-bit CPU, NVIDIA’s GeForce 6150SE integrated graphics, 1GB of DDR2, 160GB hard drive, a dual-layer DVD burner, 14-in-1 multicard reader, seven USB 2.0 ports and a $298 (MSRP) price tag. That system we just rattled off is available now at Wally World, while a slightly more stacked edition can be had at Best Buy for $349.
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Posted in nvidia, amd, athlon, best buy, BestBuy, desktop, wal-mart, walmart, cheap, emachines, EL 1210-01e, EL1200, EL1200-05w, El1210-01e | No Comments »
October 10th, 2008 by
Filed under: Laptops

It’s pretty far behind the likes of Dell and HP in getting to the bottom of the whole defective NVIDIA GPU situation, but Apple has now finally come out and confirmed that some of its MacBook Pros are indeed affected by the problem. According to a just posted Apple support document, the specific models affected were all made between May 2007 and September 2008, and include all 15- and 17-inch models equipped with NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GT graphics processors. As with other laptops, the problem shows itself in the form of distorted or scrambled video, or a complete absence of video on the screen or external display. If your MacBook Pro falls into that lot, and the problem occurs within two years of your original purchase date, Apple says it’ll repair it free of charge, even if it’s out of warranty. It’s also issuing refunds to folks that have already paid to get their MacBook Pro repaired. Hit up the link below for the complete details.
[Via AppleInsider]
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Posted in Apple, nvidia, macbook pro, MacbookPro, defective, defective nvidia gpus, DefectiveNvidiaGpus, faulty nvidia gpus, FaultyNvidiaGpus | No Comments »
September 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
Way back in December of 2006, NVIDIA and AMD were both pegged for potential price fixing, and nearly two years later it seems it’ll finally be paying the piper. A settlement agreement is detailed in a recently filed 8-K form, which asserts that NVIDIA would pay $850,000 into a total fund of up to $1.7 million, with AMD / ATI probably left to make up the rest. Of note, the 8-K filing does mention that all of this is still “subject to court approval,” but it’s likely that the green light will eventually be given. Outside of that, we’re also informed that NVIDIA will be handing over $112,500 to the individual plaintiffs who brought the case to court. Well, we’re glad that’s settled.
[Via CustomPC]
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Posted in nvidia, court, lawsuit, legal, settlement, sue, suit, graphics, class action, ClassAction, GPU, Graphics card, GraphicsCard, price fixing, PriceFixing, price-fixing | No Comments »
September 26th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, Peripherals
We won’t even begin to suggest that NVIDIA is the only company out there with, shall we say, less than crystal clear naming schemes, but we’re really hoping the latest whispers (which we’ve heard once before) about the outfit are true. TG Daily has it that undisclosed “industry sources” have suggested that the GPU maker will be dropping the 8000- and 9000-series names in an effort to simplify the model tags that appear on its products. Instead of breaking into the 10k+ club, the outfit will purportedly resort to using simple(r) letter prefixes to denote performance levels: “G” for baseline, “GS” and “GT” for mid-range and “GTX” for high-end. We’re told that the new naming arrangement could be revealed officially as early as October 15th, but ’til then, we’d recommend doing some hefty research before buying something you only thought could run Crysis.
[Via Electronista]
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Posted in nvidia, marketing, rumor, business, graphics, GPU, Graphics card, GraphicsCard, gtx, naming, brand | No Comments »
September 16th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Gaming

NVIDIA has already slashed the price of its GeForce GTX 260 and GTX 280 graphics cards in order to better compete with AMD’s bang-for-the-buck-beating ATI Radeon HD 4850 and 4870 cards, and it’s now taken things one step further by introducing a new, slightly improved model. While it likely won’t cause anyone to ditch their existing GTX 260, NVIDIA is betting that the 216 stream processors of its new GTX 260 Core 216 (up from 192 before) will be enough to win over at least a few new performance-happy gamers. Apart from that upgrade, it seems the only other real improvement you can expect is a boost to 72 texture filtering units (up from 64), but HotHardware found that those tweaks were just enough to deliver some fairly substantial performance gains, with the GTX 260 Core 216 outpacing the Radeon HD 4870 in the “vast majority” of its tests. Best of all, the Core 216 will also apparently work just fine in an SLI configuration with an original GTX 260 and, at an MSRP of $279, it doesn’t demand too much of a premium either.
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Posted in nvidia, geforce, geforce gtx 260 core 216 | No Comments »
September 11th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming, Handhelds
The long-rumored resurrection of Gizmondo from the ashes of Stefan Eriksson’s bisected Ferrari Enzo is near. Near, that is, if you believe Rich Jenkins, CEO of Media Power, the company behind this rebirth. Jenkins recently showed Swedish journalist Hans Sandberg a box full of pre-production gaming handhelds, all looking suspiciously like old, decidedly post-production units. According to Jenkins the changes are all internal, consisting of new graphics hardware from nVidia and an uprated battery (to be offered as a free upgrade to scorned owners of the original). Pricing is still undetermined but Android is confirmed; owners will have to choose either Google’s new hotness or Microsoft’s decidedly more tepid Windows CE, but can’t have both — unless they buy two. Release is still set for the end of this year via a “really cool website” hitting the intertubes next month.
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Posted in nvidia, android, windows ce, WindowsCe, gizmondo, rich jenkins, RichJenkins, media power, MediaPower | No Comments »
August 30th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops
There was no shortage of case mods at NVIDIA’s NVISION conference, but this one in particular managed to snag the majority of the spotlight. Created by Richard “DarthBeavis” Surroz, the Blade-themed DayWalker actually houses three separate computer systems; two are for playing games, while the other acts as a server. Conceptually, at least, the rig is designed to enable two users to play against one another, and given the “50+ fans” and triple SLI GTX 280 GPU setups (among other things), it’s no shock to hear that it’d cost around $18,000 to $20,000 to build again. ‘Course, that’s chump change when you’re stuffing away millions of dollars owed to the government — just ask Snipes… oh, wait.
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Posted in nvidia, sli, gaming PC, GamingPc, case mod, CaseMod, mod, gaming rig, GamingRig, gtx 280, Gtx280, nvision, blade, DayWalker | No Comments »
August 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Gaming

It may not have produced quite the onslaught of news that Intel’s recent Developer Forum did, but it looks like NVIDIA’s NVISION08 conference was at least able to pull one big rabbit out of its hat, with NVIDIA itself dropping word that it’s going to allow Intel’s X58 chipset to natively support SLI. For those not following the ins and outs of the NVIDIA / Intel relationship, NVIDIA had previously said that it would let its nForce 200 chip to be implemented by board manufacturers to allow SLI support, but that idea never exactly caught on, leading to this new, more accommodating solution. As PC Perspective reports, the native SLI support will also be far from limited, with motherboards with as few as two PCIe x16 slots and as many as four PCIe x16 slots able to support an array of SLI configurations, including a 3-Way SLI with a fourth graphics card for a PhysX boost.
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Posted in Intel, nvidia, sli, nvision08, x58 | No Comments »
August 27th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops
NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang just can’t resist throwing more jabs at Intel, distracting the inaugural NVISION crowd from Battlestar Galactica star Tricia Helfer with the claim that “Larrabee hasn’t shipped so you don’t know what it is and I don’t know what it is.” The fact that we do know what it is — a next-gen hybrid CPU / GPU — shouldn’t be a concern according to Huang, because “By the time it does ship, Nvidia’s technology will be so far advanced it won’t matter.” Besides stuffing Usain Bolt-type speed into a GPU the company will keep busy working on its WinMo smartphone hardware, and software for the not-exactly-Atom-killing VIA Nano, but forget about that rumored x86-compatible hardware ‘cuz, as Jen-Hsun reminds us, “the Internet doesn’t run on x86.” For a company that lacks innovation, is “a joke,” and at least four years behind, Intel must be doing something right, because the competition can’t keep its name out of their mouths.
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Posted in Intel, nvidia, graphics, ce oh no, CeOhNo, ce oh no he didnt, CeOhNoHeDidnt, larrabee, integrated graphics, IntegratedGraphics, via nano, ViaNano, nvision, bsg | No Comments »
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