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S3 Graphics Comes out of Hiding with Chrome20

Steve from Hexus writes "S3 Graphics, having been quiet for a while, has today announced a new graphics solution, Chrome20, with which they intend to take some market share away from ATI and Nvidia. From the article: 'We were offered a chance for some hands on play with a mid-range Chrome20 series desktop board - the machine was loaded with over 40 top games. A quick run of Half Life2 , Far Cry , Halo and a couple of other titles demonstrated that S3G's new 90nm mainstream card was working without any visual problems and with very playable frame rates.'"

29 of 275 comments (clear)

  1. Sweeet! by halcyon1234 · · Score: 4, Funny
    Finally, an alternative to all that wonderful ATI stuff.

    {blink}

  2. The Obligatory Question by mjrauhal · · Score: 5, Interesting

    So, how about Linux drivers? Free ones?

    1. Re:The Obligatory Question by SpeedyGonz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I just hope if they're going to release linux drivers, they make them less a P.I.T.A. to install than Nvidia / ATI ones.

      Maybe working more closely with the kernel developers, releasing the driver module as source code with the main kernel download, so it works out of the box.

    2. Re:The Obligatory Question by LnxAddct · · Score: 5, Informative

      Last I checked, Linux's desktop share was higher than Apple's which puts Linux over the 3% mark. Desktop numbers are highly biased againt linux simply because a) Most linux machines were previously windows, and b) Windows machines tend to be replaced more often, i.e. if i buy a windows computer today and another one in 2 years, both will be considered to be active and the nuber will be twice what it really is.
      Regards,
      Steve

  3. Don't ya love free advertising... by It+doesn't+come+easy · · Score: 4, Funny

    The picture of the fan sink was the best part.

    --
    The NSA: The only part of the US government that actually listens.
  4. Solution, or a card? by DavidNWelton · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is it a "graphics solution" or a PCI card? Sheez.

  5. Even more to come ... by VincenzoRomano · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... when S3 will adopt the Quantum-Optical technology!

    --
    Maybe Computers will never be as intelligent as Humans.
    For sure they won't ever become so stupid. [VR-1988]
  6. I hope it's bundled with PowerPoint. by i41Overlord · · Score: 4, Funny

    Because you'll need that to view the slideshow that S3 cards produce in 3d games.

    1. Re:I hope it's bundled with PowerPoint. by Silverlancer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Recently I scavenged my old computers to find a PCI card to use for my second monitor (my ATI 9700 Pro could only hardware accelerate one output at a time, leading to slow graphics, even on 2D applications like Firefox, on the second monitor). But, all my newer cards were AGP, even the one in my 266mhz Pentium II computer. So I went even farther back, to my Pentium 166mhz non-MMX. This was mistake #1.

      The card in the machine was a 2MB Virge. Things I found out about the card over the next few minutes included:

      1) It supported no resolution higher than 1024x768 60hz 16-bit color.
      2) The output looked so bad even on 2D that looking at the monitor hurt my eyes.
      3) The instant I dragged any 3D game window, even older ones, to the monitor with the Virge card, they started going at about 10 frames... per minute.

      The Virge was the worst graphics card I have ever used. A while back I even tried to run Homeworld on it (as a primary card). Lowest detail levels--check. Lowest resolution--check. Lowest memory allocation--check. End result: D3D hardware acceleration mode goes slower than software mode, at about 2 frames per minute.

  7. Coming out with by MxTxL · · Score: 4, Funny

    I've heard these will be bundled with a 6.8GHz 1TB RAM and 2TB HDD Laptop.

  8. "Playable framerates" by vasqzr · · Score: 4, Insightful


    Read: Nowhere near the performance of ATI/NVIDIA.

    Unless they plan on taking over the integrated graphics, $300 PC market, why bother?

  9. Re:S3 dear god by myc_lykaon · · Score: 4, Funny
    Please stay dead you suckered many a poor fools back in the mid ninentys if you wiki Hell you should come back with S3 + Cyrix 686 you were never loved always loathed Please return back under your rock.

    AC - meet Mr Period (.) and his friend Mr Comma (,). They make writing fun! They have a cousin you know - She's called Miss Dictionary. All of these fun people are here to help you be understood. Enjoy them, embrace them and above all use them.

    If you don't, you'll give people the impression that you are a dribbling fool who married his sister by mistake.

  10. Playable Frame Rates* by lateralus_1024 · · Score: 4, Funny

    *in head-to-head comparisons against high end ATI / NVidia cards in Windows Safe Mode.

    --
    If you think /. comments are bad, check out Digg.
  11. Re:If you mean like ATI's I'll stick with Nvidia.. by arose · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Exept when they break their drivers for months on old and low end cards. Solid support my ass, polictics are important for a reason.

    --
    Analogies don't equal equalities, they are merely somewhat analogous.
  12. Yet more magic pixie dust... by L0neW0lf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Isn't this the way S3 does it every time? Let's see:

    Step 1: S3 introduces a new graphics card. The name is similar to one they've previously made, but you've never seen that card before because no-one wants to produce and sell one. Specs seem similar too. As usual, it's supposed to be a mid-level card that won't "take on the big boys" but is supposed to have mainstream performance.
    Step 2: Hardware review sites get a prototype board. They either experience a number of driver glitches, or performance that is vanilla enough that no-one is all that excited.
    Step 4:Joe Gamer reads the review, and buys a tried-and-true midrange solution from ATI or nVidia that doesn't have the driver issues S3 was famous for in cards that actually made it out the door.
    Step 5: S3 has teething troubles with the GPU, or the drivers, or production, delaying the chip's release until its performance is at the low-end, yet priced $20-40 above others' low-end cards.
    Step 6: The lackluster performance of the GPU relegates it to boards made by one dinky little vendor nobody has heard of and doesn't trust, with nonexistent support. S3 has to lower their prices on the GPU to get any sales at all.
    Step 7: S3 doesn't profit.

    I'm just curious...how does S3 manage to keep their graphics card business afloat? Aside from a few integrated solutions on VIA chipset mainboards, I can't see any products they manage to make money on.

    --

    Never look down your nose at others. Someday, someone is bound to see your boogers.
  13. Hardware Hell by Average_Joe_Sixpack · · Score: 4, Funny

    Hardware awaiting those sent to hell:

    S3 Virge
    VIA KT chipsets
    Creative Labs 3DO Blaster
    Iomega ZIP
    Iomega Buzz
    IBM Deskstar
    Tandy CDR-1000
    HP 5L
    Cyrix 386 to 486 CPU Doubler
    Anything Belkin

  14. Re:If you mean like ATI's I'll stick with Nvidia.. by mjrauhal · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Solid support is *much* more impotant to me then politics. I use Linux because it works for me and works well, same reason I use Nvidia cards under Linux.
    I find it funny that you immediately followed this up with:
    They who would give up an essential liberty for temporary security, deserve neither liberty or security.
  15. A tiny market, but a loyal one? by Grendel+Drago · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's a small market, true, but what exactly would S3 lose by opening up its drivers? They'd instantly become the graphics card for anyone running Linux. It's a small but real benefit---and what, then, would be the cost to them?

    Apple users are a small market, but they're incredibly loyal. Why wouldn't S3 get in on that action?

    --grendel drago

    --
    Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca
    1. Re:A tiny market, but a loyal one? by myslashdotusername · · Score: 5, Insightful

      what exactly would S3 lose by opening up its drivers?

      Several lawsuits, as technology used in writing those drivers is patented, and they've likely cross-licensed the patents to even be able to write a modern 3-d driver.

      now you could strip all the patented code, and fix it into a working driver, and provide source for it, but ATI already has been doing that for years, yet all I see from the /. community is a bunch of Nvidia fanboy ravings of how good the closed source Nvidia drivers are.

      So I hope this answers your question, as to why they cannot do what you seem to think would be so easy. And hey, even if patents were a non issue, the drivers would still be a 'trade' secret, giving that away to your competetors for free means that they will always know how to make there product perform better than yours.

      --
      Everyone whom you love, loves no one else. You must be special.
    2. Re:A tiny market, but a loyal one? by fossa · · Score: 5, Funny

      This is S3. I thought competitors *already* know how to make products better than theirs?

    3. Re:A tiny market, but a loyal one? by borg · · Score: 4, Informative

      Quoth the poster:

      "now you could strip all the patented code, and fix it into a working driver, and provide source for it, but ATI already has been doing that for years, yet all I see from the /. community is a bunch of Nvidia fanboy ravings of how good the closed source Nvidia drivers are."

      Correction: there is an open source radeon driver that only supports 3D acceleration for cards up to and including the 9200 models. Newer models are only have 3D acceleration with the closed source 3D driver.

      Up until ATI stopped releasing 3D programming information to the community, ATI-based cards were all I bought and recommended. The reason is pragmatic: I didn't have to worry about the card working with a new kernel version or the latest -mm patchset. This was my choice, in _spite_ of occasionally incomplete GL implementations (I seem to remember problems with Scorched3D on my radeon).

      The last ATI card I bought was a 9200. Now, I buy nvidia. I may be stuck with a closed source driver, but at least it is a _good_ closed source driver. The latest version can do 3D acceleration over multiple cards (xinerama) if all GPUs are similar, which makes for a stunning game of quake on my triple-head system.

      If S3 came up with an open source driver that was included in the kernel sources and a marginally competent 3D implementation, I would use them for future purchases in a heartbeat.

      --
      Fermat's other theorem: "I have a simple proof, but I can't write it down as I fear it's a DMCA violation to discuss it"
    4. Re:A tiny market, but a loyal one? by Grishnakh · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why is this modded insightful? It's outright wrong.

      Ok, so let's assume you're right and the technology is patented. So what? This means that there are NO secrets allowed by the government in this product. The whole point of getting a patent is that you have to disclose your invention fully in order to obtain legal protection for it. If I want to see this patented technology, I can just look it up at www.uspto.gov. So this cross-licensed patents argument is a pile of BS.

      Strip the patented code... why? Again, if it's patented, there's no secrets. Now maybe the companies holding the patents won't license them in such a way as to allow open-sourced drivers, but this is a licensing issue, not a patent one.

      Trade secret: well, are they patented or aren't they? You can't have a trade secret on something that's patented. The two are mutually exclusive.

      You might want to learn about the various IP protections and how they differ before running your mouth.

  16. HDMI? by fallen1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    After reading the article and seeing that S3G has stated "No comment" after being asked about including HDMI on their cards, perhaps they may want to shoot for the, ummm, grey market where people who DO NOT want their computers controlled by outside forces buy their equipment? Maybe even supply areas of the world that want HDMI but without the annoying HDCP that goes along with it so they can still use older monitors/TVs _AND_ still get high definition video - not "oh, that's not a registered device with Central Command Authority! Thou shalt have only 480i. No HD for you!!"

    Personally, I'm getting beyond tired of technology companies who, some singularly and definitely collectively, make more money than Holly-hood, err, Hollywood bending over backward to placate them. Yes, I know that the studios/**AA control the media/content for the most part but if the _major_ technology players stand up and say "Well, we control the technology everyone uses to your content and there is no other tech company(ies) large enough to challenge all of us so THIS is how we're going to play ball." then WTF would Hollywood do except try to get more laws passed? Then all the technology companies that opposed Hollywood could band together to fight that off as well - dollar for dollar and then some. What would happen to the products that those companies that stood up to Hollywood do - especially when the tech-oriented crowd started praising them to friends/family/etc? Sell multiple, multiples of items that are free of DRM and friendly to the CONSUMER? Wow, what a frigging concept! Make products friendly towards the consumer, don't treat them like a dollar with a body attached, treat fair use rights as they should be treated, don't treat the customer like a criminal from the get-go, tell the **AAs to fuck off and fight piracy where it counts (you know, those media distributors in Hong Kong, Singapore, China, Russia, etc), and make millions upon millions of dollars.

    Whew, I've had a very long day.. I think I need lots of sleep now. Sorry for the rant.

    --

    Dream as if you'll live forever.
    Live as if you'll die tomorrow.
    ~Anonymous~

  17. GP2 by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'd like to see S3 expand the market into the general purpose processing market. If their new GPUs were supported as GPGPUs, they might get people to buy their cards to increase all performance, without relying only on Intel and AMD to push CPU performance.

    I've been waiting to see "coprocessor" PCI cards become popular, especially among gamers. I remember when we could buy "math coprocessors" to augment relatively slow/cheap math onboard the x86. That was before CPU manufacturing/marketing economics selected for all CPUs to have fast math sections, but with cheaper ones leaving the circuit lines "cut" to the fast part. Maybe that marketing hustle has inhibited the addition of "redundant" coprocessor chips.

    GPUs are really just fast math coprocessors, optimized for graphics math and fitted with video coder chips. Gamers are the primary performancemongers and live at the bleeding edge of cranking performance. So they're the natural demanding market for pulling GPGPU products across the bleeding edge into mainstream architectures. Especially since GPGPUs aren't "Central", they're more likely to be "stackable", scalable processing units dynamically allocable for whatever's found at boot.

    What we really need are GPUs that have "public" interfaces, either HW or SW (open drivers) that others can harness for GPGPU. Let's see if that kind of competition expands the market for these GPUs, instead of just fighting ATI and nVidia for the current market.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:GP2 by dreamchaser · · Score: 3, Interesting

      What we really need are GPUs that have "public" interfaces, either HW or SW (open drivers) that others can harness for GPGPU. Let's see if that kind of competition expands the market for these GPUs, instead of just fighting ATI and nVidia for the current market.


      OpenGL is a 'public' interface that effectively hides the hardware with a standard API while also offering low level programmability via it's shader language. We already have what you're asking for.

      Check out the GPGPU project. It sounds like it might interest you.

  18. My Take by ribblem · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I work for one of the major two major players in this market so I am probably a little biased.

    The way I read this is yet another small player wants to run with the big boys. What makes this one different? Well they admit up front that they can't compete in the high end so they will target the low end. Is this going to make a difference? I highly doubt it. I predict a flop.

    I'm not trying to be too harsh. I'm just stating it like I see it. Personally I'd like to see another player in this market, but I doubt it will ever happen unless someone like Intel decides to make high end graphics cards. Both ATI and NVIDIA spend hundreds of millions of dollars a year on R&D to make their high end cards and all that R&D is applicable to the lower end discrete cards. The lower end cards now days use most of the great ideas we've come up with for the high end cards, but we just do fewer pixels in parallel thus using fewer transistors. Our lower end cards are also fairly power effience even though this article didn't mention it (almost like want people to assume our low end cards use 100W just like our high end cards do). Unless another company spends that kind of money I doubt they'll compete. I'm not saying it's impossible, just unlikely.

    I think the graphics industry is becoming less and less likely to have a major revolution (i.e. to something other than triangle based rendering); which would make it much easier for a new player to get into the market. Graphics for the PC with all its legacy software is becoming more like the irreplaceable x86 platform everyday. If we do change to something completely different it will probably come to a console first, but the longer we go on optimizing algorithms and hardware for these triangle based systems the more unlikely such a revolution will come.

    Most people who understand CPU architecture will tell you x86 is an old inefficient design, but Intel and AMD have spent so much time/money optimizing it that nobody can seem to come up with a new general purpose CPU that is better. I think the same thing is happening with graphics. The weird coincidence is that both of these fields have 2 major players...

    1. Re:My Take by adisakp · · Score: 4, Informative

      Most people who understand CPU architecture will tell you x86 is an old inefficient design

      Actually, x86 is a very inefficient instruction set. However, the efficiency of the instruction set has been sidestepped mostly by on-the-fly hardware translation to a more efficient instruction set, large virtual register sets, out-of-order execution, and speculative execution. Neither AMD nor Intel CPU's operate on the x86 instruction set internally. Both of them translate x86 instructions into micro-ops internally and execute those instead -- believe it or not, they're doing in hardware much of what Transmeta was doing in software. The Pentium 4 doesn't even have a true L1 cache for instructions but rather uses an "execution trace cache" which has pre-translated micro-ops.

      Furthermore, it's a chicken-and-egg problem when it comes to CPUs. A lot of optimization for X86 occurs because of the vast amount of software (Windows, etc) that runs only on X86. This software is often less than efficient and the manufacturers (Intel and AMD) optimize for the software inefficiencies with things like branch prediction, dynamic fetching, out-of-order execution, etc. Unfortunately, the optimization units to deal with x86 inefficiencies end up costing nearly as many transistors as the units that actually do the work. Other architectures that are more efficient or ship less volume will get less optimization simply because there isn't a reason to throw more $$$ at these optimization units if the core architecture and Instruction Set (IS) are already efficient.

      Video cards are not bound to a particular architecture. You can have a radically different video card programmed with a similar API (Direct X or Open GL). Perhaps this can be considered similar to the CPU markets where AMD and INTEL have different internal micro-architectures that interpret and execute the same API (of x86 instructions). However, if one architecture is much less effecient than another, it's easier to switch to the more efficient architecture with an intervening well-designed software abstraction layer in-between (DirectX/OpenGL) than to do the hardware-level translation (x86 procs). Video cards don't have to worry about the software compatibility as long as they can support a minimum number of DirectX/OpenGL features. And it seems like add-on (PCIx/AGP/etc) video cards *ALWAYS* have to worry about performance and price more than CPU's. There's a market for slower cheaper CPU's like the Semprom and Celeron but the only market for cheap video cards is in the MB/integrated category. People aren't going to get excited about an add-on video card that's slow.

  19. S3 is a good option for HDTV (MythTV) playback. by tji · · Score: 3, Informative


    Even on powerful systems, decoding and displaying HDTV content can be tough. The current S3 "Unichrome" integrated video processors include MPEG decoding capabilities. This goes well beyond MPEG acceleration in XvMC / DxVA.. It does most of the MPEG processing in hardware, rather than only the iDCT/MC.

    Hopefully these new cards will continue to support MPEG decoding.. If so, I'll buy one & ditch my Nvidia with their closed source binary drivers.

    But, I would need to understand a few issues before taking the plunge:

    - Are the specs & source code for the card fully open? (VIA / S3 have had some issues on this front in the past).
    - Are these cards available for purchase? The S3 DeltaChrome & GammaChrome cards were not available as far as I could tell. Only the unichrome was available, as an integrated video option on VIA motherboards.
    - Does it have full MPEG2 decoding support?
    - Does it have MPEG4 accel support? How about MPEG4.10 / AVC accel (or full decoding)?

  20. Re:S3 dear god by zuvembi · · Score: 4, Funny

    If you don't, you'll give people the impression that you are a dribbling fool who married his sister by mistake.

    Now, now, let's not be too harsh. I'm sure he married her on purpose.