Laptop GPUs Break Out

0,1425,i=211525,00 ATI has announced a new solution for laptops whose GPUs can’t handle graphics intensive games or applications. XGP is an external graphics enhancement device containing one or more graphics cards that will be housed in a separate chassis. According to ATI and their partner in the venture, Fujitsu, you simply bring your boring old work-a-day laptop home, plug it into the XGP using special cables, jack the XGP into up to four monitors and you have a high powered gaming machine or a professional video editing suite or a full featured home theater server…or all three.

The XGP is being announced now to coincide with ATI’s release of their next gen mobile GPU, the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3800.

Shane McGlaun at Dailytech said this about the XGP:

A specially designed PCIe 2.0 self-attaching cable connects the XGP to the notebook. The cable is designed by Japan Aviation Electronics Industry, Limited. The graphics muscle from the HD 3870 should allow users to buy a lower performance notebook including ultra portable units and then attach the ATI XGP for gaming.

UMPCs too? Dayum….

Technical details, laptop requirements, availability dates and price have yet to be filled in but I am VERY excited by the concept. I have coaxed every last bit of power from the 64MB of my Radeon Mobile 9600 and was beginning to despair of ever playing Halo at work. Hope, and rocket launchers, spring eternal apparently.

See more details on this story at Extreme Tech.

AMD wants also part of the UMPC market

 20080603164645420Yes, that’s the message that AMD appears to be sending to the World at Computex 2008.

AMD revealed its 8.9-inch ultra low-cost sub notebook during Computex 2008, which is powered by AMD Sempron processor, ATI RS690 chipset and Linux OS.

AVING USA - Global News Network


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