- Jan 16, 2003
- 21,219
- 54
- 91
* Update
We originally stated that Intel had briefed VRZone, but it transpires that wasn't the case. Apologies.
Originally posted by: hellokeith
I'd like to see motherboards take over the connector duties, while processing/video/audio/physics/ai/storage/networking/etc are just plop-in-chip upgrades.
Originally posted by: zephyrprime
I don't see how a general purpose processor can possibly beat a specialized processor. After all, there isn't anything in a general purpose processor that can't be in a special purpose processor but there are things in a special purpose processor that isn't in a general purpose processor.
If you want to see how bad a general purpose processor is at rendering, install the MS DirectX sdk. Then go into the control panel and set the default renderer to the software renderer and run your favorite directx game. Prepare to enjoy a luxurious framerate of 0.1 FPS.
If there's any truth to these rumors, I think it's more likely that Intel is simply copying the idea behind Sun's Niagra.
Originally posted by: zephyrprime
I don't see how a general purpose processor can possibly beat a specialized processor. After all, there isn't anything in a general purpose processor that can't be in a special purpose processor but there are things in a special purpose processor that isn't in a general purpose processor.
If you want to see how bad a general purpose processor is at rendering, install the MS DirectX sdk. Then go into the control panel and set the default renderer to the software renderer and run your favorite directx game. Prepare to enjoy a luxurious framerate of 0.1 FPS.
If there's any truth to these rumors, I think it's more likely that Intel is simply copying the idea behind Sun's Niagra.
Originally posted by: Shadowmage
This is real. Some Intel folks gave a presentation about this.
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Integrating it with the CPU is all well and good but where exactly are you going to put 768 MB of fast VRAM like the 8800 GTX has? Solder it onto the motherboard?
At the end of the day it'll still be sharing system RAM so it'll be slow as hell.
Fast compared to a seven year old GF2 GTS. Not fast compared to something like a 8800 GTX.But if you hadn't noticed, system ram is getting pretty damn fast these days.
Sure, and by then GPUs will be using DDR6 or possibly even eDRAM. They'll also have 2 GB or even 4 GB totally dedicated to them.By 2008, DDR3 or maybe even DDR4 will be mainstream.
You want to put a 384/512 bit memory controller onto the motherboard? And where exactly are those costs going to go? Against the motherboad, that's where. I'm sure OEMs will be happy about that. :roll:And remember, it doesn't necessarily have to be faster. It may suffice to be just, wider.
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Fast compared to a seven year old GF2 GTS. Not fast compared to something like a 8800 GTX.But if you hadn't noticed, system ram is getting pretty damn fast these days.
Also regardless of how fast it is it'll always be shared with the CPU so even if it had the same bandwidth as a 8800 GTX it would still be slower.
Sure, and by then GPUs will be using DDR6 or possibly even eDRAM. They'll also have 2 GB or even 4 GB totally dedicated to them.By 2008, DDR3 or maybe even DDR4 will be mainstream.
Remember, this sort of sharing is already done on consoles and often a PC GPU has more memory than an entire console.
You want to put a 384/512 bit memory controller onto the motherboard? And where exactly are those costs going to go? Against the motherboad, that's where. I'm sure OEMs will be happy about that. :roll:And remember, it doesn't necessarily have to be faster. It may suffice to be just, wider.
The only place I see this integration working is in the low-end where it'll replace the likes of GMA because it'll be cheaper to put the GPU on the same die as the CPU.
So in the end this'll be nothing more than a cost-cutting measure which'll make bottom-end PCs a bit cheaper.
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Yeah but the RAM slots need to be 512 bit, not to mention the RAM itself.
Such RAM is expensive enough when it's soldered onto a GPU; imagine how much a slot-based solution would cost.