Saylick
Diamond Member
- Sep 10, 2012
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JHH would blame his own mother if it meant saving Nvidia from a PR mishap. /sCharlie says JHH says that it is Windows
JHH would blame his own mother if it meant saving Nvidia from a PR mishap. /sCharlie says JHH says that it is Windows
The SoC die is 18A the iGPU is 18AP as for cancellation of 4+0 unlikely cause it succeds 4+0+4 PTL SKUs.
Tbh ARL was always planned to be N3B it wasn't until 2021-22 they decided to have 20A variant than they had a record quarter.I didn't mean cancelled such as nothing would replace it. I meant like what happened with Arrow Lake, where the bottom end die on Intel 20A was cancelled and replaced by TSMC version of the same die.
This. Quickest way would be to partner with Intel. Kill 3 birds with one stone.They want to put RTX in as many devices as possible to counter Qualcomm, AMD, and Apple. They want AI inferencing to work on an RTX GPU, integrated or not.
I thought Nvidia would exclusively partner with Mediatek. But clearly, they see themselves as open to any CPU maker to integrate their RTX GPUs into the SoC.This. Quickest way would be to partner with Intel. Kill 3 birds with one stone.
Nothing stopping Nvidia from making their own ARM SoC already. Look at their Tegra lineup. Grace already uses off-the-shelf ARM cores. What Nvidia don’t have is an x86 core.This is the result of the failed Arm acquisition. Had that been successful, I'd bet Nvidia would have just designed and sold the entire SoC with RTX + Arm CPU without using 3rd parties like Intel and Mediatek.
Nothing is stopping them but they'd have to make a better SoC than Qualcomm and Mediatek. They'd also be competing against AMD and Apple. Intel is a meh. Not that easy without Arm's talent in house.Nothing stopping Nvidia from making their own ARM SoC already. Look at their Tegra lineup. Grace already uses off-the-shelf ARM cores. What Nvidia don’t have is an x86 core.
Frankly, I’m surprised they haven’t bought out a small design firm with SoC experience, a la what Apple did with PA Semi. Nvidia have a metric crapton of cash now, yet the best they can do with it is issue a 60B stock buyback.Nothing is stopping them but they'd have to make a better SoC than Qualcomm and Mediatek. They'd also be competing against AMD and Apple. Intel is a meh. Not that easy without Arm's talent in house.
They've clearly chosen a very interesting strategy which is to integrate with any SoC maker who wants an RTX GPU.
Nothing is stopping them but they'd have to make a better SoC than Qualcomm and Mediatek. They'd also be competing against AMD and Apple. Intel is a meh. Not that easy without Arm's talent in house.
They've clearly chosen a very interesting strategy which is to integrate with any SoC maker who wants an RTX GPU.
Eh... That's not the biggest threat. Gamers always think they're more important than they really are. Xbox PC gaining momentum would increase PC discrete GPU demand. Good for Nvidia.That's not it at all. The threat (to nVidia, and Intel) is XBoxPC gaining momentum. No guarantee that will actually happen but you can see that they would want to be prepared just in case.
This is AI inference mostly. Period. The biggest threat to Nvidia is Apple (and AMD) winning local AI inference due to superior SoCs.
Less doomed and more like "sooner or later AMD will prybar the market via die reuse".NVidia recognizes that on client, their 2 chip (CPU, GPU) solution is doomed and will inevitably be surpassed by single chip APU.
You make a good point—on paper it does look like an antitrust issue, but with how regulations are enforced (or ignored) today, it often feels like those concerns don’t get much traction anymore.I have many thoughts but isn't this anti-trust... but I guess in todays political climate that is useless to consider
It was doomed the moment Apple announced the M1.True, and also, in general, NVidia recognizes that on client, their 2 chip (CPU, GPU) solution is doomed and will inevitably be surpassed by single chip APU.

You forget Intel their SoC are fine for this task for small LLM they just need to make a bigger fatter SoC.This is AI inference mostly. Period. The biggest threat to Nvidia is Apple (and AMD) winning local AI inference due to superior SoCs.
Nvidia said the decision was made more than a year ago, when Gelsinger was still CEO. Nothing to do with Trump.1. Appease Trump
said Nvidia's Huang said, during the joint press conference with Nvidia on Thursday. "They would have been very supportive, of course. Today I had the opportunity to tell Secretary [of Commerce Howard] Lutnick and he was very excited and very supportive of seeing two American technology companies working together."
The work began around a year ago, and preliminary agreements were reached by Intel's then-CEO Pat Gelsinger and Nvidia's Jensen Huang even before that. (A year ago, Joe Biden was president, though no one suggested his administration was involved, either.) Intel and Nvidia are working on custom data center CPUs that Nvidia will integrate into its AI platforms as well as GPU tiles that Intel will integrate into its upcoming client processors. In both cases CPUs and GPUs will use Nvidia's NVLink technology as an I/O interface. By now, there are three teams working together on the joint projects.
End of desktops and PCs were "foretold" for more almost 30 years now. First, Desktops and DIY are alive as ever, because if it wasn't gaming market wouldn't be thriving and dozens of players making everything including chairs(chairs!!!). If anything that will kill dGPU, it'll kill all the PC market, including desktops AND notebooks, it's the Smartphone market.It was doomed the moment Apple announced the M1.
The $5b investment was likely to appease Trump. Maybe the technical partnership was not to appease Trump.Nvidia said the decision was made more than a year ago, when Gelsinger was still CEO. Nothing to do with Trump.
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Teams at Nvidia and Intel have been working in secret on jointly developed processors for a year — 'The Trump administration has no involvement in this partnership at all'
Targeting hundreds of millions of client PCs.www.tomshardware.com
They're not as alive as ever. They're greatly diminished. Desktops and DIY used to be a way bigger market as a percentage of computers.End of desktops and PCs were "foretold" for more almost 30 years now. First, Desktops and DIY are alive as ever, because if it wasn't gaming market wouldn't be thriving and dozens of players making everything including chairs(chairs!!!). If anything that will kill dGPU, it'll kill all the PC market, including desktops AND notebooks, it's the Smartphone market.
The $5b investment was likely to appease Trump. Maybe the technical partnership was not to appease Trump.
They're not as alive as ever. They're greatly diminished. Desktops and DIY used to be a way bigger market as a percentage of computers.
ah no, there are other markets to amortize volumes with.dGPUs will become ever more expensive the fewer customers there are to amortize the cost of developing the hardware and the drivers
Wrong because that would be an expensive Halo product.This deal gives Nvidia a way to preserve that midrange GPU market and maintaining volume by selling them as iGPUs packaged with Intel CPUs.
Wrong because that would be an expensive Halo product.
Anything but mainstream.
It's not about marketing or whatever, fat APUs are just that.You underestimate the marketing power of Nvidia's name in 2025. They have all the power Intel did in the heyday of "Intel Inside" without having to spend a dime on advertising or "market development funds".
a) not a failureYou're assuming that because AMD's Halo stuff has been a market failure that this will be too
Is your stance that Nvidia does not spend money on advertising and market development? Everything we know about them points to massive spending for both advertising and market adoption.You underestimate the marketing power of Nvidia's name in 2025. They have all the power Intel did in the heyday of "Intel Inside" without having to spend a dime on advertising or "market development funds".
