Lenovo planning to use Ion for larger netbooks?

Who knows what dark, unreliable alleys the Commercial Times prowled to get this information, but the Chinese newspaper says that Lenovo is planning on shipping 11.6-inch and 12.1-inch NVIDIA Ion-based “netbooks” sometime in the future. Given the currently strained relationship between NVIDIA and Intel, it’ll be interesting to see if Intel comes through on its promise to sell Atom chips separately or if that was just the empty PR speak. We’ll see how this plays out — right now all we’ve heard is that Ion will launch on the desktop, so we wouldn’t hold your breath.

[Via jkOnTheRun]

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Lenovo planning to use Ion for larger netbooks? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 19 Feb 2009 08:14:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel takes NVIDIA to court over chipset licensing

Oh, brother. Another Intel / NVIDIA paper fight? As fate would so fittingly have it, these two giants are meeting up yet again, this time in the courtroom. After talks “of over a year” failed to amount to anything, Intel has filed suit against NVIDIA that — according to Intel — “seeks to have the court declare that NVIDIA is not licensed to produce chipsets that are compatible with any Intel processor that has integrated memory controller functionality, such as Intel’s Nehalem [Core i7] microprocessors and that NVIDIA has breached the agreement with Intel by falsely claiming that it is licensed.” Of course, NVIDIA’s official stance is that Intel is simply trying “stifle innovation to protect a decaying CPU business.” We have all ideas that the whole truth (and nothing but the truth) lies somewhere in between, but we guess that’s why we have people called “lawyers” heading to work each day. If you’re daring enough to dig deeper, all the links you need are neatly positioned below.

[Via HotHardware]

Read
– Intel’s take
Read – NVIDIA’s official response
Read – Further Intel comments

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Intel takes NVIDIA to court over chipset licensing originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 18 Feb 2009 14:09:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA’s Tegra in the flesh, booting to Android and pumping out 1080p video

NVIDIA really has a technical wonder in the Tegra APX 2600 chipset, and is more than happy to show it off, with a myriad of tech demos on display here at MWC. Some of this they showed off back in June of last year, but it’s no less impressive — there aren’t really any mobile devices out there capable of this stuff right now. Still, we’re here for the new, and NIVIDA showed up with Android running on one of its proof-of-concept units, and with another unit pumping out 1080p video, with a claimed 10 hours of battery life at that task. NVIDIA says it took them just a few weeks to port Android to the system, and we found it already quite snappy and even usable on the capacitive touchscreen-ed device. We also saw the forthcoming Android-running Yulong N8 and IAC S2 Tegra APX phones, along with an untitled CompalCom set — they were all in non-working prototype form, but it’s clear this chipset isn’t just for MIDs. Check it all out in the videos after the break and the gallery below!

Continue reading NVIDIA’s Tegra in the flesh, booting to Android and pumping out 1080p video

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NVIDIA’s Tegra in the flesh, booting to Android and pumping out 1080p video originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Feb 2009 10:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA’s Tegra jumps on the Android bandwagon

We’ve been hearing all kinds about NVIDIA’s Tegra the last couple weeks, and have all been quietly wishing and hoping that we’d see Android getting some action — and we will, and how! Apparently while the initial focus is Windows Mobile, NVIDIA sees Android surpassing Windows Mobile sales into 2012 and has decided to put some serious grunt into the new OS’s development. The NVIDIA Tegra 2600 part is being developed with an optimized and accelerated Android release aimed squarely at OEM development and set for release sometime in Q2 this year. We’ve no idea how long it takes from reference to finished-in-our-hands-product, but the briefing hints at a couple mystereious sets, the “IAC S2” in Q3 and a “Yulong N8” by Q4. This guy is under glass over at NVIDIA’s H.Q. here at MWC, so expect more once we stroll over for a look-see. Few more pics after the break.

Continue reading NVIDIA’s Tegra jumps on the Android bandwagon

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NVIDIA’s Tegra jumps on the Android bandwagon originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 03:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA’s Tegra to power $99 MIDs

NVIDIA’s really promising the moon here, and if they even halfway deliver we could have a real “game changer” (as they say in the business) on our hands. What’s on offer is a theoretical $99 slide-out keyboard MID, running a Tegra 600 chipset and Windows CE — NVIDIA, as usual, offers the innards and the concept, but will leave it to manufacturers to create (and price) the actual units. The device could handle HD video playback, “days” between battery charges and always-on wireless connectivity. This form factor lands in between NVIDIA’s Tegra APX chipset for smartphones and ION GeForce chipset for netbooks, and if it actually delivers it seems like it could actually make MIDs viable in the market. Of course, there’s the question of what sort of Windows CE skin it’ll take to make this fun to use for the target market — perhaps the fact that Tegra is coming to Android in the near future is enough to make this all moot, but we’re willing to give the $99 MID a fighting chance.

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NVIDIA’s Tegra to power $99 MIDs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Feb 2009 03:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA shows off Ion Windows 7 multitasking, confirms launch details

We’ve already gotten a pretty good idea of Ion’s capabilities, but NVIDIA doesn’t seem to be one to turn down an opportunity to show it off, and it did just that recently at a joint press conference with Microsoft. As you might have guessed, the pair was especially keen to show off Windows 7 multitasking on the platform and, judging from the video available at the read link below, it seems to be more than up to the task, with it able to convert a 1080p video file to a more portable size while the video was playing, and play Left 4 Dead at 720p resolution without any noticeable hiccups. In other news, NVIDIA also confirmed that the first Ion-based system would, in fact, be a desktop, and that it’ll begin shipping sometime this spring. Unfortunately, there’s no word as to who may be manufacturing said desktop, with NVIDIA’s Drew Henry only going so far as to say that it’ll be “very small” and “affordable.”

Read – TweakTown, “NVIDIA demo Windows 7 multi-tasking on ION “
Read – Electronista, “First NVIDIA Ion system a desktop, due in spring”

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NVIDIA shows off Ion Windows 7 multitasking, confirms launch details originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Feb 2009 12:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft places stamp of approval on Vista-based Ion SFF PCs

Not that NVIDIA really needs Microsoft to give the ole thumbs-up here, but having that seal of approval may convince some currently wary manufacturers to jump in and support the Ion platform over one of those perfectly fine alternatives. As with so many other devices in the world, NVIDIA’s Ion platform is now Certified for Windows Vista, meaning that PC users could one day experience all the joys of the aforesaid OS on Ion-based rigs as low as $299. We’re told that such machines could be on the market by summer, and they’ll be positively ready to deliver smooth Blu-ray playback while supporting DirectX 10, Aero Glass, Flip3D and GPU acceleration. Bring it, we say.

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Microsoft places stamp of approval on Vista-based Ion SFF PCs originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Feb 2009 11:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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ASUS N81Vg: first laptop with NVIDIA’s GeForce GT 120M

Not quite an ultraportable, but not quite a behemoth — the 14-inch ASUS N81Vg fits nicely between the two laptop extremes, and given that it’s the first to house NVIDIA’s GeForce GT 120M graphics card, even gamers can feel free to sneak a deathmatch or two in between conference calls. The rig itself can be ordered with one of many Core 2 Duo processors, up to 4GB of DDR2 RAM, upwards of 500GB of hard drive space, an optional Blu-ray burner, 1.3 megapixel webcam and a battery good for three to four hours. The newfangled 120M GPU features NVIDIA CUDA technology, 32 processing cores, DirecX 10 support, 1080p video playback and 110 gigaflops of computing power. Per usual, ASUS is keeping quiet when it comes to pricing and release details, but it ought not be long now, tiger.

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ASUS N81Vg: first laptop with NVIDIA’s GeForce GT 120M originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 10 Feb 2009 16:22:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Intel ships Atom N280 for 720p netbooks — NVIDIA’s Ion points, laughs

With ASUS’ Eee PC 1000HE up for pre-order, it’s clear that netbooks are ready to make the jump from Intel’s lowly 1.6GHz Atom N270 to the suped-up 1.66GHz N280. In fact, Intel just confirmed shipments of its new Atom processor to PC makers. Now don’t let us hear you bellyaching about that being a meager 0.06GHz jump — the magic isn’t in the clock but in the faster 667MHz (up from 533MHz) front-side bus and new GN40 chipset with hardware-based 720p video decoder. That easily bests the Atom N270 pairing with the customary 945GSE chipset without any increase in power consumption. Think about that when trying to make a 10-inch netbook choice between ASUS’ Eee PC 1000HE (with new N280 proc and GN40 chipset) and Acer’s new N270-based Aspire One. Then again, maybe you’re waiting for the first netbook to ship with NVIDIA’s Atom-based Ion platform with full 1080p playback? Might as well, who knows, maybe you’ll land a production version of Windows 7, a swiveling touchscreen, and a finger-optimized UI in reward for your patience.

Update: Looks like the Eee 1000HE doesn’t have all the new bits — Laptop did some digging and found that it’s still got the same old 945GSE to go with that new proc, although it is still capable of doing 720p video playback. Boring, we’ll wait for the real GN40 machines to show up soon.

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Intel ships Atom N280 for 720p netbooks — NVIDIA’s Ion points, laughs originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 06 Feb 2009 03:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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NVIDIA Ion platform review roundup

A handful of sites have managed to get their mitts on a miniature test PC equipped with NVIDIA’s Ion platform, and it looks like the line between netbook and laptop just got a whole lot blurrier. According to the testers, the setup delivers smooth HD video playback and could be a boon for the Home Theater PC market. It won’t play Crysis, but the DirectX 10-compatible chipset should do World of Warcraft and Left 4 Dead justice. Though the company claims it’ll only use 12% more power than comparative Intel 945GM/E-based solutions, PC Perspective found the test units to consume twice the wattage — of course, it might be a different story when Ion-equipped PCs hit retail channels. NVIDIA says the platform will tack on about $50 to $100 compared to similarly-spec’d 945GM/E models, and the first two computers to use it — one desktop and one netbook — should be out early summer.

Read – PC Perspective
Read – Laptop Magazine
Read – Hot Hardware

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NVIDIA Ion platform review roundup originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Feb 2009 14:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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