NVIDIA Tegra Note 7 update adds Always-On HDR, Android 4.3, more

NVIDIA has updated the Tegra Note 7 to Android 4.3, pushing out a new update this morning which also boosts the DirectStylus pen technology for left-handed tableteers, and adds the … Continue reading

NVIDIA SHIELD update boosts remote PC play to up to 1080p res

NVIDIA has released a new update for SHIELD that boosts the quality of GAMESTREAM play when the Android console is paired with a gaming PC, enabling new control methods, and making better use of the device’s own display. The OTA update, which is headed out to SHIELD owners today, means that PC gaming over WiFi […]

NVIDIA SHIELD Black Friday deal trims Android gaming gadget by $50

NVIDIA is redoubling its efforts to push its SHIELD portable Android console, kicking off a Black Friday weekend deal that trims another $50 off the cost of the handheld. The Tegra 4 powered clamshell – which allows for standalone play, as well as streaming gameplay from a PC with GeForce graphics – will be eligible […]

OUYA white edition released with a space boost

The original black OUYA game console has been out on the market since earlier this year, and here in the Autumn of 2013, the team has released a white edition with double the internal storage space. This machine works with the same hardware besides – Android inside, a wireless controller for games, and a box […]

EVGA Tegra Note 7 Review

The stylus was dead, and now it’s back. What once was the hallmark of cheap touchscreens and finger-unfriendly software has, thanks in no small part to Samsung’s efforts with its Galaxy Note range, had a second-wind; even the popularity of aftermarket capacitive pens for the iPad suggests not every iOS user agrees with Steve Jobs […]

NVIDIA Tegra Note 7 stylus detail demo joins first full teaser

The NVIDIA Tegra Note 7 line of Android tablets is set to see the light of day just in time for the end of the year here in 2013, bringing with them a mix of graphics processing finesse and software-based stylus technology. Today a couple of videos have surfaced with NVIDIA speaking on the abilities […]

Android Is Gaming’s Future, And The One OS To Rule Them All, Says Nvidia CEO

nvidia-shield-2

Nvidia has some side bets on Surface and Windows RT, but Android is the really exciting OS of the future, according to CEO and co-founder Jen-Hsun Huang on an investor call today to discuss the company’s latest financial results. Huang pointed to the Shield as its means of furthering the growing Android gaming ecosystem, but games are truly only one part of the picture for Android’s bright future, he believes.

“Shield is our initiative to cultivate the gaming marketplace for Android,” Huang said, as quoted by ZDNet. “We believe that Android is going to be a very important platform for gaming in the future, and to do so we have to create devices that enable great gaming to happen on Android.”

The Nvidia Shield, released earlier this year, is essentially a small Android tablet welded to a gamepad controller, creating effectively a portable Android-powered gaming console that can go toe-to-toe with the likes of Nintendo and Sony’s dedicated mobile gaming hardware. A recent software update for the Shield also improves its ability to output games content to big screens, including TVs, making it also a suitable microconsole for living room systems.

Huang’s statement is perhaps the clearest articulation of Shield’s intended purpose yet; the console is designed to provide a focal point for free-floating Android game developer ambitions, offering up a target to build for. This helps the overall gaming ecosystem, but also helps Nvidia, by prompting more developers to build experiences tailored for Tegra, its mobile system-on-a-chip, thus encouraging more Android device OEMs to look its way when building out specifications for their latest hardware.

Android’s potential goes beyond gaming into virtually every corner of connected living, however, says Huang. Tegra’s presence in automotive systems and set-top boxes, data centers, all-in-one PCs and more make it the perfect platform for the future, Huang noted, calling Google’s mobile OS “the most disruptive operating system that we’ve seen in a few decades.”

In many ways, the rise of Android is literally like a gold rush – prospectors are setting up shop and staking claims, and suppliers like Nvidia are congregating around the hub to benefit from the bump in the overall supply ecosystem created by the new demand. With initiatives like the Shield and the Tegra Note reference tablet (which is now being sold by British retailer Advent as the Advent Vega), Nvidia is engaging the market even further by placing seeds that it believes will slowly grow to become congregation points around which the rest of the Android ecosystem centers their own efforts, developers and device makers alike. It’s as if they found a seam of gold ore, to stretch the metaphor, and then then called out to the miner community to let them know exactly where the gold is at.

It’s a long-term strategy, and one that works in tandem with short-term ones like introducing a new LTE chip to help boost Tegra sales immediately. There’s a lot of competition, however, and Qualcomm is running away with the market, so the question remains whether or not these seeds Nvidia is planting will have time to come to fruition.

ADVENT Vega Tegra Note 7 aims for UK with NVIDIA’s tablet design

This week the folks at ADVENT have made clear that they’re going to be the first in the world to push announcement of their version of the NVIDIA Tegra Note 7 tablet. The ADVENT Vega Tegra Note 7 works with an NVIDIA Tegra 4 quad-core processor and is headed to the UK specifically. We’ll be […]

NVIDIA Editor’s Day 2013 Wrap-up: G-Sync, 4K, and gaming’s blurred lines

Though the event continues to be called “Editor’s Day”, this week we had an extended stay with NVIDIA in Montreal, learning about the company’s newest in gaming development and hardware innovation. The biggest news of the event was surely the unveiling of G-Sync, a hardware module made by NVIDIA to be planted in the backs […]

NVIDIA Project Logan runs Faceworks in real time

This week at an event in Montreal, NVIDIA showed off the high-powered demo software called Faceworks (previously working on NVIDIA Titan processors for PC) working on the next-generation mobile-aimed processor Project Logan. This processor will almost certainly be re-named Tegra 5 as each “Project” codename has been re-named “Tegra #”, and what we’ve seen here […]