Video: 23 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295s packed into one system, “overkill” exemplified

Ha, and you thought paying hundreds of dollars for a NIC was insane. For one reason or another (likely “another”), AtlasFolder has loaded in 23 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295 graphics cards into a single server rig, and while only 17 were installed at the time of this video (he’s waiting for a few nuts and bolts before installing the others), we’re already amazed. Call us crazy, but something such is this definitely isn’t what NVIDIA had in mind when it revived SLI. Per usual, the vid’s past the break.

[Thanks, P]

Update: Turns out this is a GPU Folding Farm at Stanford. Impressive.

Continue reading Video: 23 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295s packed into one system, “overkill” exemplified

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Video: 23 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295s packed into one system, “overkill” exemplified originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 07 Apr 2009 10:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA’s Franken-Mini is half HP, half Tegra, no Intel

And now, a little visit to the “Why not?” department: NVIDIA is showing off an HP Mini 1000 at CTIA that it has totally gutted, replacing the laptop’s stock Atom-based circuitry with its own Tegra wares atop a bone-stock Windows CE build. At first the move seems counterproductive since Tegra can’t run XP or Vista, but if you look at this as the first prototype of a large Tegra-powered $99 MID, you’re thinking along the right lines. The concept isn’t indicative of any sort of partnership between NVIDIA and HP, but the chipmaker is looking at this as an opportunity to demonstrate to manufacturers how easy it is to make a device like this — and like other Tegra devices we’ve seen, this thing could easily have HDMI, run fluid 3D graphics, and generally make the world a better place at a stupid cheap price. We were also shown a Tegra single-board computer measuring no larger than a single small-outline DIMM like you’d find in a modern laptop, proof that this action can be scaled way down depending on the kinds of devices manufacturers are looking to make. Check out a video of the Franken-Mini after the break.

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NVIDIA’s Franken-Mini is half HP, half Tegra, no Intel originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Apr 2009 08:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Video: NVIDIA’s ION-based netbooks and nettops are go for launch

Things are finally hotting up in NVIDIA’s ION camp. An official press release now tells that the first batch of “incredibly small and affordable PCs” (like the Acer Hornet rumored for an April 8th launch) are due in Q2 — that’s as early as today folks, on up through the end of June. Along with the new gear, NVIDIA is promising optimized software support from powerhouse developers like Adobe, Google, Microsoft, and Electronic Arts in an effort to signal the platform’s suitability for serving up 1080p video over HDMI in a home theater as well as gaming, photo editing, and general computing in nettop- and netbook-sized devices. Bring it, we say… we’re so over Intel’s GM945-class chipsets.

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Video: NVIDIA’s ION-based netbooks and nettops are go for launch originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 02 Apr 2009 04:12:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA revs up pro graphics lineup

Squabbles with Intel aside, NVIDIA’s engineers have been keeping busy, and the company’s got a whole slew of new high-powered workstation graphics chips to talk about this morning, along with new SLI virtualization support. The new gear ranges from the Quadro NVS 295, which’ll drive two 30-inch displays for under $100, all the way up to the monster 4GB Quadro FX 5800, which packs 240 CUDA cores onto a PCI Express x16 card for $3150. The 5800 and baby brothers Quadro FX 3800 and 4800 all support SLI Multi-OS, which allows workstation users to tap into the cards using multiple OSes in Parallels — the HP Z800 is the first machine off the line to offer the capability, but more will follow. Pretty geeky stuff, head to the read links for more info.

Read – Workstation graphics press release
Read – SLI Multi-OS press release

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NVIDIA revs up pro graphics lineup originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 30 Mar 2009 10:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA to buy significant stake in VIA?

Rumor has it NVIDIA is currently talking to VIA Technologies about purchasing a large stake in the company, to the tune of around 300 million new shares each priced somewhere in the range of NT$9 and NT$12 ($0.27 and $0.35 US equivalent) apiece, for a grand total of approximately US $81 million to $105 million. Don’t put too much stock into this at the moment, as none of this is confirmed — indeed, the last time we heard such murmurings was also sourced from DigiTimes, who doesn’t have the best of track records. That said, the two companies have worked together before and do have the Ion platform connection. With Intel talking a lot of sass and litigation lately, we wouldn’t put past NVIDIA to cuddle up with a close friend.

[Via Electronista]

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NVIDIA to buy significant stake in VIA? originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 28 Mar 2009 04:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA sues Intel right back over Nehalem chipset licensing

Looks like the NVIDIA and Intel’s lawsuit over Nehalem chipset licensing is heating up — NVIDIA’s filed a countersuit seeking to terminate Intel’s licenses to its patents. This little bit of nyah-nyah is just the latest in the recent feud between these two: we’ve got a month-long argument about Atom chips and NVIDIA’s Ion netbook platform going on, and don’t even get anyone started on whether GPUs or CPUs are the wave of the future, it’s freaking endless. Of course, this will all likely end in a settlement agreement and the these two realizing that they’re actually in love, but until then we’re just going have to put up with it. Video after the break.

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NVIDIA sues Intel right back over Nehalem chipset licensing originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 27 Mar 2009 11:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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IBuyPower trots out GeForce 3D Vision-equipped desktops

IBuyPower’s been on a pretty good roll of late with these new gaming desktops, and it’s keeping things interesting with its latest two. Rather than just shoving the latest processors from AMD and Intel into the Gamer Fire 640 and Gamer Paladin F830 and calling it a day, it has thrown in a 22-inch Samsung SyncMaster LCD and NVIDIA’s GeForce 3D Vision system with each rig. As for the Gamer Fire 640 specifically, it comes loaded with an AMD Phenom II X3 720 CPU, 4GB of DDR3 RAM, a 500GB hard drive, a GeForce 9800GTX+ (512MB), dual-layer DVD writer and Vista Home Premium 64-bit. The Paladin gets loaded with a Core i7 920, 6GB of memory, a Blu-ray drive and a GeForce GTX 260 GPU. Detailed specs (along with the full release) are just past the break, but if you’re scouting base prices, they sit at $1,349 and $1,999 in order of mention.

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IBuyPower trots out GeForce 3D Vision-equipped desktops originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Mar 2009 13:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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17-inch MBP fan / overheating issues causing GeForce 9600M to bug out?

Oh, brother. We can already tell this one’s going to be a fun, enjoyable journey to follow. Shortly after Apple’s 17-inch unibody MacBook Pro began making its way out to early adopters, small legions of owners have reported all sorts of bizarre graphical glitches. While we first assumed that it was NVIDIA’s GeForce 9600M causing all the mayhem, further investigation has led us to believe that faulty fan controls could be the culprit. Granted, all of this is just speculatory at the moment, but it seems that some users have noticed that their fans aren’t kicking into high gear when they should. ‘Course, some folks have seen those RPMs spin up while the funky lines and psychedelic colors remain, so it’s still hard to pinpoint a definite root cause. We’re told that folks from NVIDIA and Apple are spending their weekends working to figure it out, but we can’t help but be reminded of an eerily similar string of events with overheating MacBook Airs just last year. Hopefully a fix will be out soon; till then, just pretend those erratic colors are some new curative feature.

Read – Fan grumbling
Read – More discussions

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17-inch MBP fan / overheating issues causing GeForce 9600M to bug out? originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 08 Mar 2009 18:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA’s GeForce 9600M causing issues in 17-inch MacBook Pro?

It’s hard to say at this point whether we should point the blame at NVIDIA, Apple or right in between the two corporate campuses, but it seems that an uncomfortable amount of 17-inch MacBook Pro owners are having some serious issues with their GeForce 9600M graphics card. For those unaware, there is actually a 9400M in there too, but word on the street has it that the random green lines and nasty artifacts are only showing up when the more potent card is kicked into action. Most folks are saying that a reboot solves the problem momentarily, but eventually it returns to bother, annoy and sadden new owners. Anyone else out there pulling their hair out over this? Here’s hoping a firmware update is all that’ll be needed to bring closure to yet another NVIDIA-Apple related fiasco.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

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NVIDIA’s GeForce 9600M causing issues in 17-inch MacBook Pro? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Mar 2009 21:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Clevo’s 18.4-inch M980NU desktop replacement gets put through its paces

The gang over at Notebook Check just got their hands on that Clevo M980NU we’ve had our eyes on for a couple months now. A desktop replacement clearly aimed at the gaming set (what else could all those blue LEDs possibly mean?), this guy rocks the new nVidia Geforce GTX 280M GPU which, combined with its 3.06GHz Intel Core 2 Extreme processor, gets called out for its “first-class performance in virtually all fields of application.” The 18.4-inch display is no slouch either: with 1920 x 1080 resolution and a max contrast of 595:1, this guy offers “much bigger color space” than most notebooks, although the reviewer points out that you’d see better performance from an RGB-LED panel display such as the Dell Studio XPS 16. But don’t take our word for it — to check out the comprehensive, earth-shattering review hit that read link.

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Clevo’s 18.4-inch M980NU desktop replacement gets put through its paces originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 04 Mar 2009 14:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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