Dell adds high-powered ATI FirePro M7740 graphics to the Precision M6400

We’ve always lusted after Dell’s high-zoot Precision M6400 mobile workstation, and now we’ve got yet another reason to save all these nickels and dimes in the sock drawer: the company’s adding AMD’s new ATI FirePro M7740 graphics processor to the mix. The new chip is due to be announced tomorrow at SIGGRAPH 2009, and like the rest of the FirePro line, it’ll offer 1GB of DDR5 frame buffer memory, 30-bit DisplayPort and dual-link DVI output, and tons of CAD application certifications. We’re looking for hard specs and prices now, we’ll let you know as soon as we get ’em.

Dell adds high-powered ATI FirePro M7740 graphics to the Precision M6400 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 03 Aug 2009 19:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ATI’s $1,800 2GB FirePro V8750 GPU introduced and reviewed

Need a quick way to blow 1,800 bones? Looking to single-handedly jump-start this so-called “economy” we keep hearing about? Look no further, friends, as ATI just did you a solid. Just four months after the outfit dished out its 1GB FirePro V7750, the company is now looking to strike it rich once more with the 2GB FirePro V8750. Obviously designed for the workstation crowd, this CAD destroying GPU is equipped with more GDDR5 memory than our own four-year old Quake III server, but as HotHardware points out, the clock speed remains exactly the same as the entirely more affordable V8700. When pushed, this newfangled card did manage to best every other rival on the test bench, but not by a wide margin. What you’re left with is a cutting-edge device that’s priced way out of consideration for most, and frankly, way outside the realm of sensibility. If you just can’t shake the urge to hear more, give that read link a tap for the full review.

Read – ATI FirePro V8750 review
Read – ATI press release

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ATI’s $1,800 2GB FirePro V8750 GPU introduced and reviewed originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 28 Jul 2009 04:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD’s RS880 integrated graphics chip could make netbooks usable

Tired of hearing that your next favorite netbook / nettop is hamstrung with one of those woefully underpowered GMA950 graphics chipsets? Eager to see what all AMD is going to do about it? If The Inquirer is to be believed, an up and coming integrated chipset should elevate the multimedia prowess of low-end machines, as the RS880 would actually be based around the new Radeon HD 4200 core. In theory, at least, this chip would be around 15 percent faster than similar alternatives out there now, giving future netbooks just enough power to churn through 720p video without st, st, stuttering. Needless to say, the suits are refusing to comment on the matter, but we’re definitely holding out hope for this one.

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AMD’s RS880 integrated graphics chip could make netbooks usable originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Jul 2009 08:52:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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EVGA rolls out GeForce GTX 285 graphics card for Mac Pros

We got plenty of advance word about this one, but EVGA has finally gotten fully official with its Mac Pro-friendly version of NVIDIA’s GeForce GTX 285 graphics card, which is now available to order from the Apple Store for the not so low price of $450. That’ll of course get you a card that’s mostly identical to its less-than-new PC counterpart, including 1GB of DDR3 memory, a whopping 240 processing cores, a memory clock speed a 2,584MHz, memory bandwidth of 159GB/sec, and a pair of dual-link DVI ports that can each drive a 30-inch monitor at 2,560 x 1,600 with ease — assuming you can still afford a pair of 30-inch monitors after you shell out for one of these, that is.

[Via PC World]

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EVGA rolls out GeForce GTX 285 graphics card for Mac Pros originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 10 Jun 2009 19:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD shows off world’s first DirectX 11 GPU

On a roll of late, aren’t we AMD? Just when you thought the fun was slowing over in Taiwan, in flies this: the world’s first official DirectX 11-friendly GPU demonstration. We also learned that DX 11 (and presumably, AMD cards to push it) will debut prior to the dawn of 2010, but outside of that, most everything else is being kept under wraps. Indeed, the demo was mostly to show that things were still on track and for the chip maker to assure us all that it will “deliver DirectX 11 first.” Alright, AMD — now you’ve something to prove. Full release is after the break.

Continue reading AMD shows off world’s first DirectX 11 GPU

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AMD shows off world’s first DirectX 11 GPU originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 03 Jun 2009 00:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS Mars GPU hands-on at Computex

We knew it was coming, and come it did. Over in Taiwan today, ASUS was demonstrating its motherboard-incinerating Mars graphics card, which it proudly deemed “the world’s fastest.” In fact, the card packs 21 percent more power than a reference GeForce GTX 295 card, and the eight-heatpipe cooling solution keeps things at least a notch below molten. We found that the card will actually be sold in some capacity, though only 1,000 of them — all of which will be individually numbered — will be made available. Two more looks after the break.

Continue reading ASUS Mars GPU hands-on at Computex

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ASUS Mars GPU hands-on at Computex originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Jun 2009 09:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD’s ATI Radeon E4690 brings HD, DirectX 10.1 support to embedded GPU arena

AMD’s newfangled ATI Radeon E4690 may not be the next Crysis killer, but it should do just fine in next-gen arcade and slot machines. All kidding aside (sort of…), this new embedded graphics set is said to triple the performance of AMD’s prior offerings in the field, bringing with it 512MB of GDDR3 RAM, DirectX 10.1 / OpenGL 3.0 support and hardware acceleration of H.264 and VC-1 high-definition video. The 35mm chip also differentiates itself by integrating directly onto motherboards and taking on many of the tasks that are currently assigned to the CPU, but alas, it doesn’t sound as if we’ll be seeing this in any nettops / netbooks anytime soon ever.

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AMD’s ATI Radeon E4690 brings HD, DirectX 10.1 support to embedded GPU arena originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 01 Jun 2009 08:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA GPU resurrected after 10 minutes at 425°F

We’ve seen some pretty weird stuff in our years on this planet — heck, we’ve revived our own drenched Sony DAP by burying it in rice for 48 hours — but this is easily one of the most bizarre gizmo resurrections we’ve ever come across. As the tale goes, one valiant NVIDIA GPU owner apparently bit on a myth which suggested that a pinch of time in the oven (quite literally, might we add) would repair faulty GPUs that were throwing up oodles of vertical lines. After purchasing another GPU to replace his ailing 8800GTX, he figured he had zilch to lose and gave it a shot; lo and behold, the temporary warmth seemingly melted the solder points and healed micro-fractures that were causing the unwanted lines. We’ve yet to hear how his attempt at returning the new GPU went, but hey, there’s always eBay. Give the read link a look if you’re still in disbelief.

[Via Digg]

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NVIDIA GPU resurrected after 10 minutes at 425°F originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 30 May 2009 21:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS Mars GPU weds twin GeForce GTX 285s, might just melt your face

You into frame rates? No, we mean are you frickin’ bonkers over watching your rig hit triple digits in a Crysis timedemo? If you’re still nodding “yes,” have a gander at what’ll absolutely have to be your next buy. The ASUS Mars 295 Limited Edition is quite the unique beast, rocking a pair of GTX 285 chips that are viewed by Windows as a GeForce GTX 295. All told, you’re looking at 240 shader processors, a 512-bit GDDR3 memory interface, 32 total memory chips and 4GB of RAM. Amazingly, the card is totally compatible with existing drivers and is Quad-SLI capable, and if all goes to plan, it’ll actually peek its head out at Computex next week. Rest assured, we’ll do everything we can to touch it.

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ASUS Mars GPU weds twin GeForce GTX 285s, might just melt your face originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 29 May 2009 11:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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AMD busts out world’s first air-cooled 1GHz GPU

The last time a GPU milestone this significant was passed, it was June of 2007, and we remember it well. We were kicked back, soaking in the rays from Wall Street and firmly believing that nothing could ever go awry — anywhere, to anyone — due to a certain graphics card receiving 1GB of onboard RAM. Fast forward a few dozen months, and now we’ve got AMD dishing out the planet’s first factory-clocked card to hit the 1GHz mark. Granted, overclockers have been running their cards well above that point for awhile now, but hey, at least this bugger comes with a warranty. The device doing the honors is the ATI Radeon HD 4890, and it’s doing it with air cooling alone and just a wee bit of factory overclocking. Take a bow, AMD — today’s turning out to be quite a good one for you.

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AMD busts out world’s first air-cooled 1GHz GPU originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 May 2009 11:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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