NVidia NV17M Mobile GPU Preview 149
Mathew Solnik writes: "A year ago nVidia set the laptop world on fire with the release of the GeForce2 Go mobile graphics chipset. Today they push the envelope with the release of the NV17M mobile graphics chipset. Offering unmatched performance in 3D gaming applications, the NV17M promises to put nVidia at the forefront of high end graphics solutions for mobile systems. This GPU is much faster then the Geforce2 Go and is more or less the Geforce3 for laptops. Check out AMDZone for the preview." Pretty incredible how powerful laptops are, even given their lag behind desktop performance. This is far more powerful than any video card I've ever owned.
Hooray! (Score:1)
Ugh. (Score:4, Troll)
<insert obligatory overheating joke here> Anyway, please pick the submissions a little more carefully. I don't want to read press releases on Slashdot.
Re:Ugh. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Ugh. (Score:2)
Then again, Slashdot's never claimed to be an un-biased source of information.
But really, he has a point--if I wanted biased hardware news I'd go to Tom's Hardware Guide. Let's keep Slashdot as objective as possible!
Re:Ugh. (Score:2, Funny)
nVidia? I thought AMD was setting the world on fire...
Re:Ugh. (Score:1)
nVidia? I thought AMD was setting the world on fire...
..and Apple, and IBM, and RedHat, and Amazon... Hell, no wonder we have global warming! The planet's on fire from all this innovation!
Re:Ugh. (Score:1)
And let us not forget that the GeForce2Go is an absolute piece of junk that hardly anyone uses. Compare it to a Radeon Mobility and there is no comparison...
Re:Ugh. (Score:1)
Says who? Do you have some links to reviews or benchmarks that back that up?
Laptop Gaming (Score:1, Insightful)
-the small screen
-the cramped keyboard
-the battery life....
I just don't see a reason, honestly, for having 'awesome gfx' in a laptop.
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:1)
Not so much for gaming but in my last job I talked to many people who wanted "awesome gfx" on their laptops to do presentations using high end (http://www.ptc.com) cad/cam packages.
nVidia's mobile CAD/CAM GPU is the Quadro2 Go (just announced in August). You can get it now in Dell's first-ever CAD/CAM-specific laptop, the Workstation M40 [dell.com].
-nukebuddy
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:2, Informative)
Maybe not all the time but...
I've stopped using my desktop machines and moved myself over fulltime to my laptop and docking stations. (I work in three different locations, and it was too much work keeping all three computers in sync with each other.)
I'm pleased with all that my laptop lets me do - but to tell the truth, the graphics are pretty slow. I usually play 2-D games (like Age of Empires) and I miss my Matrox card on my desktop while I watch the screen "chunk" by on the laptop.
So... it would be nice to have the power for gaming available if I wanted to use it.
But I still probably just going to buy a console after Christmas. (I'm waiting to see which one emerges as the favorite (hoping for Gamecube...))
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:3, Interesting)
-the small screen
You can connect the laptop to a monitor, or even a big screen TV in your living room. Moving a laptop to the living room is a lot easier than moving your desktop.
-the cramped keyboard
Who plays games with a keyboard? Get a gamepad or a joystick.
-the battery life....
It should be easy enough to find a electric outlet if you're indoor. When I carry my laptop on the go, I rarely have to use my battery.
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:1)
Last, who wants to have to cart around a gamepad/joystick in addition to all of the other crap you have to have to make your laptop work the way you want it to, just so you can play a game?
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:1)
"Who plays games with a keyboard?" - er... (Score:1)
Epic Games' Unreal Tournament and id Software's Quake 3 were both ported to various consoles recently. One of the target consoles had a keyboard and a mouse as an option (so you could get Internet access on it). One of the game companies (I think it was Epic, but I could be wrong) decided to implement PC-style keyboard/mouse controls (the usual setup is W/A/S/D for movement, mouse for aiming and shooting) for those who had the right hardware.
The other (probably id Software, but again, I could be wrong) only included support for the normal console gamepad. I've heard rumours that this was for fairness, because they watched some games of a beta and realised how easy the keyboard and mouse users found it to frag the poor deprived people with gamepads :-)
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:1)
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:3, Insightful)
Cramped keyboard? Correct me if I'm wrong but aren't close keys a BOON while gaming? No more having to stretch to reach ctrl-7 - the keys are MUCH closer together.
Uhm...if you game, and are on battery power... Why aren't you using the power block? Laptops aren't *always* about being on battery power.
Mobility does not necessarily mean 'cut off from civilization'. If I had spurious amounts of cash, I'd buy a very high-end laptop. 30+ gig HD, GeForce Video, DVD/CD-RW, 15" screen, 256M at minimum... All in one, small, easy to carry package. The wife has a new Inspiron 8100. Everything, and I do mean *everything* is on board. Why NOT use it for gaming? I'd rather pack a 8-lb laptop over to my friend's house and plug in ONE cord (or two; one for power, one for network, if he doesn't have a WAP) than a 30-lb tower, 40+ lb monitor, a pack full of cables and other assorted hardware...
I might be able to make more room for the Vodka!
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:1)
Plus, a builtin DVD/CDRW, 2 USB, IEEE1394, SVideo and normal TV out, 10/100 Ethernet, 40G HD and a decent sound card.
With the CD builtin, the second media bay holds a second battery. Plenty of time to watch Braveheart on a plane as long as you don't need the floppy drive.
As for gaming, the GF2Go is nearly as fast as a normal GF2, and it smokes the hell out of my home system right now. 100FPS Quaking. Just hook it up to a real monitor (which it will drive at 2000x1400 if your monitor will handle it), and suddenly a glorious dual-boot Win2k/Linux 7lb wonder machine. Who needs a desktop with this thing?
Can't wait to get my hands on this GF3Go/NV17M thingy....
Sales Demos/Development on the move (Score:2, Interesting)
Also, when we developers travel, it helps to be able to work on the environment while on the move. Our system requires quite a powerful system (if you insist on running the various servers and the client all on the same box - *grin*) to allow you to do testing and full blown development on the move.
So, _you_ might not see the reason for this, but believe me, a lot of companies working with any kind of 3D technologies certainly will, as will developers and people who like to go to a LAN party using something smaller than an SUV (moving my 19" hitachi monitor is a b*tch)....
Tomb.
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:2)
I just don't see a reason, honestly, for having 'awesome gfx' in a laptop
Personally, I'd love to be able to take a laptop with "Awesome Graphics" and sound for that matter, to a Lan Party instead of lugging my desktop with me.
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:1)
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:1)
Also there are ways around all of the limitations that you've presented:
Small Screen - Actually quite a few laptops come with generously sized screens. I can't imagine a laptop with this kind of video card having a tiny screen.
Cramped Keyboard - So what? How big of a keyboard do you really need? If it's that big of a deal get a docking station with a regular sized keyboard.
Battery life - A/C adaptors rock your world.
Anyway, just my two cents...
Cheers!
-Pointed Stick
Forget about the laptop market... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Forget about the laptop market... (Score:1)
Although I assume you were actually kidding, I wouldn't be giving them any ideas. This is just the sort of crazy thing that Nvidia would do to destroy productivity everywhere. And besides, you'd need to wear gloves to deal with the heat, and have extra batteries in a belt pack or something just to power the damn thing.
but ... isn't it still just a laptop? (Score:2)
It sounds like the polygon count is high enough, so are laptops a viable gaming platform? (sure would make it easier to attend those LAN parties and smoke pot ... oh wait...)
- Cheers,
- RLJ
Modern laptops are pretty fast (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Modern laptops are pretty fast (Score:1)
As such, your friend has the advantage now, but unless he buys a new laptop in the mean time, come Doom 3 (and other more intense titles) he's going to be left behind. (As I already am with the SavageIX in my Toshiba - it just can't run most modern games, despite the 650Mhz P3)
Re:Modern laptops are pretty fast (Score:1)
Getting an LCD screen for a desktop that displays 1280x1024 is $600+. You can save a few hundred by not getting an LCD, but after using them for a while, I've sworn off CRTs (LCD = less eye-strain and crisper image).
So at that point, there is no difference in cost! The only problem is that your upgrade path is *very* limited... however, at the end of your 3 year warranty (which is excellent), you can just sell that laptop (which will have a better resale in 3 years than today's desktops) and get a new one.
Personally, after doing the math I decided I didn't need a desktop anymore. Now I browse the web and play Counterstrike from my couch/bed/bathroom ala 802.11b!
Re:but ... isn't it still just a laptop? (Score:3, Interesting)
It works absolutely beautiful as a gaming platform and as a development box. I regularly play CounterStrike, Unreal, and Starcraft (real box breaker there..) I'm not sure of any game that is on the market that is not well playable on it.
Think "DVD" (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Think "DVD" (Score:2)
It's high time I can watch the movie I want to watch on the plane ride, and not some cheese-dick 90 minute cookie cutter comedy.
Cheers,
-- RLJ
Note the sarcasm in the plane movie comment, but yes, your point is well taken!
Laptop Gaming (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:3)
It really is nice to be able to do _everything_ on one computer and to be able to carry that computer where ever you go (e.g., work, home, beach house, etc).
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:1)
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:2)
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:1)
Re:Laptop Gaming (Score:2)
Mind you, it's only temporary, but said laptop is a pretty damn good gaming rig.
Did they fix the screen too? (Score:1)
Modern displays dont blur (much) (Score:1)
Re:Did they fix the screen too? (Score:1)
what about the screens?? (Score:1)
FPS look great on paper, but will it actually result in an improvement in the playability?
Re:what about the screens?? (Score:1)
Re:what about the screens?? (Score:2)
-adnans
Re:what about the screens?? (Score:1)
Also as its been said, there is the advantage of having a sustainable performance level for those heavy scenes.
Finally... (Score:1)
Re:Finally... (Score:1)
The Geforce2 Go sold me on notebooks (Score:1)
The downside is that the GPU likes to use power. Quite a bit too. With my Dell system with just one battery I can get 2 hours playing graphics intensive games. I almost made 4 just typing documents. That's fine for me.
If I wanted to have longer battery life I wouldn't have gotten a machine that is classified as a desktop replacement.
Embeded DRAM (Score:3, Interesting)
I can see Nvidia's next generation GPU to have embeded DRAM. This one is soo close.
Re:Embeded DRAM (Score:1)
Re:Embeded DRAM (Score:2, Informative)
What NVIDIA is doing here is simply to put the memory-chip in to the same die as the core is, but they are not one and the same chip, they seem to be separate. And the memory-bus is your typical 128bit-variety.
Re:Embeded DRAM (Score:1)
meaning that it is not embedded, but soo close
get it?
Re:Embeded DRAM (Score:1)
great and LCD refresh rates ? (Score:3, Insightful)
great you can mangle triangles and blit them to the screen fast
OR
have 2 hours more working time
now on a trip on a train which would you rather have
intel have finally woken up to power with transmeta breathing down their backs and you guys want to waste it useing these cards.
hell Xscale / MIPS with a LCD controller on chip is way for me
regards
john jones
Re:great and LCD refresh rates ? (Score:1)
On a train? I would still take my gaming machine with. I would just bring an extra battery.
Re:great and LCD refresh rates ? (Score:2)
Trains aren't always the land of no power (Score:1)
Low power + high graphics frame rates with full textures, shaders, and the whole nine-yards would be great. Given that right now it is an either or scenario, your choice of laptop has to be based off need. Don't get one of these power-consumptive laptops if your first concern is long battery life.
OTOH, if you like some portability and some battery life (you have a window of battery life) along with the capability to take powerful 3D with you, these laptops are the way to go.
Eventually, these and the low power laptops will maybe merge and won't that be a happy moment for all of us?
Re:great and LCD refresh rates ? (Score:4, Insightful)
1) When the chip is working with 2d, it does not consume max power. Like all processors consumption is based on how hard it is working. Now granted, something like this won't be as low power as say a Rage Mobility, it still has sufficiently low drain to work in a laptop.
2) The target kind of laptops for this are, by their nature, large high drain devices. They probably have large LCDs (15"), fast processors (900mhz+) lots of ram and so on. Computers like that also tend to pack lots of battery power. We have some new Dell C810s at work with the GeForce 2 Go and when you stick both battries in they can really last a long time, even when doing 3d work.
3) Some people would rather have a single system than a desktop and a laptop. In that case, having powerful grapics can be important. For some, work requires it, and for others, it games. And please, don't give me any shit about game on PCs or that you ought to own a console or the like. Having fun is important and some of us really like PC games.
I get a little sick of people whining about the power consumption of digital devices in general. Yes, companies should strive to make devices that minimize power drain, and believe it or not by and large they do, however there are legimate reasons to want to own high drain devices with lots of silicon. If a tiny MIPS computer works for you, fine, use it, but please dont' assume that the rest of us don't have legitmate uses for beefier systems. That use may well just be to amuse ourselves, but that is a perfectly good use.
Re:great and LCD refresh rates ? (Score:1)
what are you talking about?
blit: the process of transferring a bitmap to a display surface via a blitter
Just because you can use some fancy term doesn't mean that you know what your talking about.
blitting is primarily a 2D process. The NV17M is a 3D accelerator. Geez get your poop straight.
The bottom line is nVidia makes the best solutions for hardcore graphics on the desktop and laptops.
You don't see the point! You'd rather have 2 hours more working time!
Well there's people out there that would like 2 hours more of CounterStrike time.
And obviously there is a market for chips like these out there. Or else nVidia would have stopped with the Go.
You want to talk about transmeta. Well, I didn't see them at Siggraph this year. The premier computer graphics conference.
nVidia kicked 3dfx and other's asses by putting out kick ass products that people want to buy.
They did it by embracing OpenGL when everybody else was drooling over M$'s Direct3D.
They did it by putting out vey good Linux drivers when other companies didn't give a crap.
They did it by pushing the envelope. And they are doing it again by pretty much bringing the Geforce3 to the laptop.
The only reason you call it waste is because you don't need the 3D accelerator. You'd rather be working away on the train.
SL
Re:great and LCD refresh rates ? (Score:1)
The company I work for had a computer custom built into an aluminium suit-case - a 'luggable' - so that we'd have decent graphics cards for demonstrating our products. A laptop is far far easier to transport, and far cheaper - and generally you can plug in somewhere when doing a presentation!
time for an upgrade.... (Score:5, Funny)
NV17M Marcus' home PC
_____________________________
350MHz 200MHz
64MB 32MB
2048*1536 640*320
1 square inch 2 square feet
Erm. Quake? Whats that....
Flawed numbers? (Score:3, Interesting)
Here are the benchmarks for my system:
Q3 1024x768x32: 49.7. High Detail.
Max Payne 1024x768x16: (no FPS display, definitely playable, I'd say ~24). Max Detail.
The system is a 1ghz/256M running Windows 2000. Unless NVidia's benchmarks were done on say, a 500mhz laptop, I'd imagine much better performance than what they'd note; especially nothing that NONE of the benchmarks broke the 100 fps mark, when according to my numbers, they should have creamed it (Q3 1024 at 5X GF2 should have been 250 fps, and Max Payne should have been near 90).
Re:Flawed numbers? (Score:1)
Re:Flawed numbers? (Score:1)
I also have an I8K with a G2Go. And I get the same FPS scores as mentioned above. I'm a big fan of nVidia, but I think they've pulled out the hype machine a little to much on this one.
Frame Rate Comparisons (Score:1)
FSAA numbers (Score:2)
That's why the scores seem low, and that's also why there's such a dramatic improvement over the GF2Go and Mobile Radeon 7500.
The NV17M does multi-sampled AA, which one texture lookup per pixel, instead of one texture lookup per sample. This gives considerably greater performance, but the quality of the texture filtering is not as high. The GF2Go and Mobile Radeon 7500 both use supersampling, which uses the slower (but arguably higher quality) method.
Laptop usage. (Score:1)
If there is an option to turn off sections of the GPU to suit truly mobile tasks, this could please quite a few.
-FlynnMP3
#include
sold out to the man? no, really? (Score:1)
Don't nobody say there's no real humor on the web anymore. Just read Slashdot. No, not the posts, silly, the articles. -moof
fire (Score:2, Funny)
My personnal wishlist... (Score:3, Interesting)
I am using a Dell 8100 notebook 512MB ram, external 80GB firewire drive for dumping data that I won't access too often, 48GB 2.5" drive, overall my rating is 9/10, it ROCKS, the IDE raid thing would really be welcomed but I know it's not a mainsream request, unfortunately.
Re:My personnal wishlist... (Score:2)
Hrm... perhaps. I wonder if reading 1MB from 2 disks uses a whole lot more juice than reading 2MB from 1 disk. The two disk option would definitely cost something in power, just because of the doubled seek costs, but iduno. Maybe it's not such a bad idea. Anybody with actual knowledge have any revelations?
Re:My personnal wishlist... (Score:1)
The hard drive in a laptop is one of the biggest power drains.
Laptop drives draw about 2 watts if you are using them almost constantly -- less if not. The LCD screen draw 4 - 10 watts.
-nukebuddy
Re:My personnal wishlist... (Score:1)
ATi has a new chip too... (Score:1, Informative)
World's fastest and most powerful mobile workstation GPU designed for 3D animation and CAD/CAM
Read it here: http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/011112/122494_1.html
About time. (Score:1)
So i applaud nVidia for this initiative. Here's to hoping that ATI can counter with an even better card
Vendors..? Availibility..? (Score:1)
Now, if IBM would offer me a PIII-M laptop with 1600 x 1200 display and a GeForce 2 Go (or one of these NV17M chips), I would happily pay for it. It would be very beneficial to me.
sigh...
Re:Vendors..? Availibility..? (Score:2)
Not in my experience (Now up approx 500 Dell PC's installed) Dell hardware is very reliable. It's their GeForce2Go drivers that could do with some attention. I've got 3 Dell 8100 here in the office, All three are absolutely brilliant, except mine has XP. And the video driver keeps forcing XP to crash. I had to install a BETA driver before the damn thing worked right. Now it is, I'm very happy. Not the first time I've had problems with Dell drivers, especially on newly released hardware.
All in all, the GeForce2Go works incredibly well and so does the 8100. I rarely if ever need to use anything else and it's worth every cent.
Any hard core gamers use laptops? (Score:1)
Anyway, are there really any hard core gamers out there that would be playing on a laptop?! I know I wouldn't. I know someone who currently only owns a laptop and he plays his Counter-Strike at work.
If I owned a laptop, I'm pretty sure I wouldn't be doing my gaming on it. I would want a laptop for doing work while on the road. Besides, I'd want the extra battery life from using a non-too-powerful GPU over the 3D capabilities any day!
Anyways
Apple (Score:1)
Investor world on fire too.. (Score:1)
AND makes julienne fries (Score:1)
Finally I will get both my wishes - an easily portable notebook, with graphics hardware by the only company that can engineer a good graphics system. (news flash: ATI doesn't count. Their driver developers couldn't program themselves out of a cardboard box)
Nvidia == Defeats the purpose of linux (Score:1)
I know I'm going to get modded down of this, but why do linux users like Nvidia products, if there is only closed binary support for them??
That defeats the entire purpose of using an open source and free Operating system. If I wanted to use CSS drivers, I would have stuck to Windows and had real support from Nvidia.
Just makes me wonder, thats all
Sunny Dubey
The driver license invalidates everything? (Score:1)
Apparently having a single closed-source binary module defeats the open-source nature of the kernel and all the available software that is under an open source license. I personally have played with the source of a lot of programs, but have never felt the need to hack my graphics driver. Apparently I should be using some other platform, according to your logic.
You may want to .. (Score:1)
Faster than ATi (Score:1)
From what I can gather ATi had not already kicked Nvidia's teeth in already but NV17M only *just* matches its performance!
http://www.rage3d.com/reviews/hardware/mobility
http://srd.yahoo.com/goo/Ati+Mobility+Radeon/2/
I will be buying a new laptop come January and will probably buy another Dell. Indeed they seem to be the only manufacturer that offers these high performance chipsets. Well except for Toshiba I think.
So any ideas on which which one to buy?
Regards,
Po
Re:Faster than ATi (Score:1)
Something went nuts with cut and paste
http://www.rage3d.com/reviews/hardware/mobility
and
http://www.sourcemagazine.com/csm/Forum3/HTML/0
Po
I hate NVidia hype (Score:1)
Everyone gets hyped that this thing comes out, but ATI has already beat them to it, it offers similar features. I've heard that ATI's powersaving features are far more advanced too.
Its also funny that they say that NVidia offers unmatched DVD playback, because they've always been awful at that.
The benchmarks for the mobile 7500 were incredible, and NVidia is right out lying about their numbers, there is no way around that. It makes the Go look faster than the 7500, when the mobile 7500 was far far faster than a standard 64 meg radeon, and very close to a full blown Radeon7500.
I believe ATI is also packing 32 or 16 megs of DDR with their mobile chip, giving the laptop manufacturer the option to add more, making it more cost effective. So all these new features, aren't new.
So when can I buy a Mobile Athlon with one? (Score:2)
Maybe Micron [micronpc.com] will build one. Their new Athlon/nForce desktops look sweet, definite Dell-killers.
Obsolete in 1 hour!!! (Score:3, Funny)
I thought I was king of the world. So I throw it on my LAN and go to slashdot...
... to see the upcoming GeForce3 Go be announced.
Noooooooooooooooooooooo!!! It's not fair!
-----
so 6 months from now.... (Score:1)
Obligatory Open Source argument... (Score:3, Insightful)
nVidia supplies source code only for the 2D functionality on their cards to date, apparently because their technology draws on some patent-encumbered features from third parties (rumored SGI). nVidia flatly refuses (and indeed cannot) release the specifications to Open Source developers.
nVidia supplies a binary precompiled OpenGL-accelerated driver for Linux, or rather several varieties for different kernel configurations. However, those precompiled drivers are (1) not supported by some distributions (e.g., Red Hat) because they can't be properly debugged, fixed or improved by distribution-producing companies, and (2) are unstable for some people running Linux for unknown reasons. A badly written kernel plugin can wreak plenty havoc on the whole running system, with little protection.
Matrox and ATi are more supportive of the Open Source world, because they are in control of their own technologies and see the benefit of many developers collaborating on their drivers. DRI support can move forward to get fast and safe access to video hardware without endangering the safety or security of the rest of the machine.
One of the Windows technologies' biggest problem is the unexplained BSoD. Death from nowhere with little explanation. The major cause of BSoDs is poorly written device drivers which run in an unprotected ring zero environment. One bad instruction can ruin your whole machine's state. Is this what we want for the Linux environment? Are we going to keep adding unprotected, unknown and undebuggable closed source solutions into the Linux kernel, adding more and more sources of kernel lockups? Do we need to start talking about a PSoD (Penguin Screen of Death)?
I'm looking forward to the upcoming drivers for new ATi Radeon cards, myself. Open Source DRI/DRM drivers and solid 2D and 3D performance. How about you?
Dodgy drivers: not just a closed-source issue. (Score:1)
ATi's drivers for Windows have recently been a lot better, but in recent memory they've been pretty dodgy. My roommate has a well-utilized Radeon, and he's come across quite a few driver issues. Most have been resolved by this point, but it's taken a while.
Yes, ideally these issues would be fixed quickly with an open source driver. But, would they? Some drivers tend to fall by the wayside, or end up with just as many crashes as so-called "unprotected, unknown and undebuggable closed source solutions."
I'm looking forward to ATi's new drivers, but I'm not so sure how quickly they'll make their appearance, or if they'll be on par with NVidia's current "unstable" drivers.
What is this? Bash nVidia week? (Score:1)
Nvidia may not play by the RMS rules of Open Source but they do support it. The reason they don't use the standard interfaces is because they have a unified driver on i386 systems. (Linux, Windows 9x & NT, and I think beos all use the same driver, they just have a wrapper around it to interact with the OS) Do a google for the FreeBSD nvidia driver, it failed because of an incompatibility but they were supposedly very supportive of it.
And yes it's unstable but they give very good support. I got a reply from them in 2 days. On a sunday.
Love my laptop (Score:1)
Point being, I use it for everything. Gaming is just part of it. I have a 15.1 inch screen and I use it for business presentations. I go to University and I bring it with me so I can work in the library. We have stations everywhere so I can plug in power and ethernet or serial. Seriously, its great being able to put down 2-3 grand (CANADIAN!) and get something that can do that and still have power left over for some 3D design (only tried Bryce 4 so far, but it works OK) I've got a PIII 750 with 128 mb RAM and 12 GB of drive space. Oh, and I just used it at a LAN party two days ago.
It's probably not a GeForce 3 (Score:2)
Since the XBox uses a GeForce 3 part, we should see games that use the vertex shader hardware real soon now.
I suspect the chip is doomed (Score:2)
However, portables don't have that option. Assuming that the price for the NV17M is anything like the GeForce 3 (and nVidia will have real problems with its vendors if it doesn't), you're looking at adding a few hundred dollars to the price of every portable for power that only a fraction of the users will want.
I can't see many manufacturers choosing this chip. I wonder what nVidia was thinking?
Fast graphics/cpu isn't enough (Score:1)
I have a Ghz Athlon workstation, a Dell 850 MHz Pentium 3 based Inspiron 8000 and a GHz Mobile Athlon based Compaq 1200Z.
My workstation is between two or three times faster than both laptops. Now, how can that be when they have somewhat comparable cpus? Because of a fact that a faster cpu or graphics card can't change: The I/O subsystem in a laptop is so horrible that it's beyond comparison with our workstation I/O. And, have in mind that the x86 PCs have the worst I/O performance of all architectures. Whenever I fire up the simulator, then the laptops are pretty fast, because that is almost exclusively cpu bound. Compiling or other more full-system stuff makes the laptops crawl.
I'd say to every gamer or hacker out there: Don't buy a laptop because you think it's a desktop replacement. The overall system performance on them sucks and you will be disappointed. By a laptop if you need a mobile computer.
Bo Thorsen,
SuSE Labs.
Re:Price Point? (Score:1)
most laptops are divided into :
$4-5000 : high end everything maxed out. 15 inch LCD
$2-3000 : ok for most general use. 13.3 - 14.1 inch LCDs
$800-1200 : cheapo pieces of shit. 12 - 13 inch LCDs with streaking.
i prefer having one laptop for cheapo piece of shit usage...banging around/carrying around etc. one in the $2-3000 range for home use and office use.
Re:Price Point? (Score:1)
Re:Fewer polygons... (Score:4, Funny)
Does that mean that they do compile?