AMD's XConnect Brings Native Driver Support For Thunderbolt 3 Graphics Cards 42
AnandTech writes about AMD's XConnect technology: Last night AMD issued a driver update that brought support for a new technology, XConnect. In a nutshell, XConnect is AMD's trade name for running external video cards via Thunderbolt 3, a long-awaited development that Thunderbolt owner Intel is finally getting behind and allowing. [...] AMD is also laying out the technical requirements for supporting XConnect. Not just any laptop/desktop with Thunderbolt 3 can support an external GPU, as there are specific hardware and software requirements, which is why the Blade Stealth is the first qualified laptop. In particular, laptops need to support what is being called the Thunderbolt 3 external graphics standard, or eGFX for short.
Every thing as a perifiral (Score:1)
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It wasn't too long ago companies were toying with their servers running the 3D game, and just piping you the video from it.
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at least they ran the video cards at the full X16 pci-e speed or at least X8
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The only way latency can be solved on my AT&T U-Verse connection is if the server farm is in my basement.
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Most of those newfangled USB-C connectors also carry Thunderbolt, which makes things like this work.
Why not work on real pci-e ext cables / buses (Score:4, Interesting)
Why not work on real pci-e ext cables / buses that does not need bios or bridge chips and is not capped at pci-e 3.0 X4 (at best)
Re:Why not work on real pci-e ext cables / buses (Score:5, Informative)
Why not work on real pci-e ext cables / buses that does not need bios or bridge chips and is not capped at pci-e 3.0 X4 (at best)
1. Thunderbolt does not have a chicken-and-egg problem. There are plenty of Thunderbolt displays already available.
2. Thunderbolt is "good enough". It can daisy chain multiple hi-res displays.
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Why not work on real pci-e ext cables / buses that does not need bios or bridge chips and is not capped at pci-e 3.0 X4 (at best)
[sarcasm]
Yes, why wouldn't AMD work on a technology that isn't well supported by many players? I mean it's not that AMD hasn't tried to develop interfaces on their own before and failed (XGH). [arstechnica.com] Also I'm sure that Intel has not done any work with this fancy Thunderbolt interface and that TB devices are rare. [newegg.com] Never mind that technology never evolves at all. I feel like a schmuck for going with USB over serial. Here I am stuck at USB 1.1 because the technology has never advanced.
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PCI-E is designed for internal system interconnect and is designed around the mechanical and electrical environment therein. - Meaning the connections are robost, things don't move around, conductor runs are short, and you're in a shielded/isolated environment
The design requirements for a user accessible port interfacing with consumer grade external peripherals are a bit different. End users are, frankly, dumbass cheapskates.
They'll happily, and forcefully jam whatever dollar store cable they can get and co
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What more could you fucking want?
A nice 15 year old scotch and a hamburger would suffice I think.
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What more could you fucking want?
A nice 15 year old scotch and a hamburger would suffice I think.
Treasure any 15 yo single malt scotch whilst you still can...
http://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/n... [dailyrecord.co.uk]
Re:Why not work on real pci-e ext cables / buses (Score:5, Insightful)
Something about high bandwidth signals being more difficult to transport as conductor length increases, blah blah blah, more power/error correction/signal shenanigans (differential versus single-ended), and most users not wanting to pay so that Joe_Dragon can run a high end video card off of his laptop.
I.e., physics, engineering, and economics.
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PCIe 3.0 runs at 8 GT/s, which has very high signal integrity requirements, at that speed even a 1mm stray solder ball starts acting like an antenna. If you want to route that signal over cheap wire (which is a requirement) you are going to have signal integrity issues at trace lengths >12" from the PCIe port on the chip-set, meaning your cheap cable is probably 3-4" in length at best. A 3' cable is going to cost $100 if you do it this way. Note that a typical 50cm U.2 cable costs $50 because of the s
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Wimp. My graphics card is my furnace.
What is the point? (Score:2)
Maybe I am being a bit stupid, but I don't get it.
This box has a graphics card, a power supply, USB ports, and an ethernet interface. It is pretty much an entire computer except it doesn't have non-graphics memory, a CPU, a hard drive, or a Windows license. Does that make it cheap enough that it can compete with actual computers?
Yes, with this thing you can game on your laptop, but most gamers probably use external keyboards and screens anyway... What is the use case?
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Have a laptop as your normal computer that you can take with you. When you are at home, connect a cable and you have a better 3d gaming experience without needing to maintain two separate computers.
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Fair enough, Windows upgrades is a good point. It might be worth paying extra to only have to deal with one Windows installation.
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That's possible. But then the heat and noise that is not in the NUC, will instead be in the GPU box, so you don't gain much. You might as well put everything in 1 case for more (than PCIEx4) performance and less boxes/wires/PSUs.
A tiny ultrabook for on the go, with such a dock at home however...
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Or why not a NUC on the go.
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Again, same problem. You could use the TB cable to keep the noise in another room, but it would be simpler to just run HDMI + USB and keep the entire computer in the other room.
How much do you like puking? (Score:2)
One great use of an external graphics box is to support VR units with much better performance, so that there's no lag and you aren't throwing up from using it.
It can also potentially work not just with computers, but mobile devices also...
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But which bit would be different if that box was an actual PC, not a box with a GPU?
ehhhhh (Score:1)
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Intel killed Expresscard?!? It's Intel, not intel BTW.
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