New Mobile GeForce Go Graphics
Brent Kupras writes "NVIDIA just launched a whole bunch of GeForce Go 7xxx graphics cards for notebooks. There is a Go 7900 GTX, a Go 7900 GS, a Go 7600 and a Go 7300. The GTX version looks like just a faster copy of the old Go 7800 GTX. There are also a few benchmark results of these new chips against the older NVIDIA chips and ATI's chips."
This might just provide laptops with enough power to run Aero Glass. That is presuming that battery life and testicle health don't matter.
This is great, though. With the new Core Duo laptops and killer mobile chipsets, I'm finally seriously consider getting a laptop and dumping the desktop (more like deskunder, but whatever) all together.
I hope Dell considers offering some of these cards in their upcoming Core Duo Latitudes. Currently the D610 & D810 are only offered with Intel's integrated card or a Radeon X300 (which uses "Hypermemory" basically borrowing RAM from the system like the Intel card). The X300 unfortunately has some lockup problems with Xgl in Linux, so having the option to go nVidia would be great.
Sadly, PS/2 was yet another victim of USB, which doesn't care what you plug into it, the electrical slut.
Let's just hope that they support drivers for these new mobile cards better than they do the Go5200 series. Dell hasn't updated their drivers since 2004, and I used to be able to download the normal nVidia drivers; then sometime in mid-2005 the nVidia drivers stopped recognizing the Go5200 as supported hardware. Harrumph.
speaking of old cards, i volunteer at a church refurbishing old comps for poor kids. almost all the computers that we get donated are pre 2000. after seeing so many really old graphics cards in those machines, i had to make a comparison list of witch ones were the dogs, and witch ones were ok for a free system (mind you, these machines are Pentium II and III era).
from fastest to worst (and yes, i've seen many rage II systems)
the Radeon 9000 and up
can work much faster if the
CPU is faster than 1GHz:
=GEFORCE 5600 (PCI)
=RADEON 9100 PRO 128MB
GEFORCE 5200 (128-BIT)
Radeon 8500
geforce3 Ti500
geforce3 Ti200
Matrox Parhelia
GeForce3
Radeon 9000 (Hercules PCI)
GeForce4 MX 420/440
Radeon 7500
geforce2 GTS
RADEON 64MB DDR
Kyro II
geforce 256 DDR
Geforce2 MX 400
Radeon 7000 S60 no T&L!!!
intel 845G (integrated)
ProSavage DDR (integrated)
RAGE fury MAXX
GEFORCE 256 SDR
SAVAGE 2000 32MB (Viper II)
VOODOO3
MATROX G400 bump mapping!
TNT2 ULTRA
TNT2
VOODOO2
ati Rage Fury (Rage 128)(DX6)
Banshee
Nvidia Riva TNT 16MB
S3 savage 4 ???
S3 Savage 3D
G200 16MB
i740
NVIDIA RIVA 128
ati RAGE pro
ati RAGE II
i disable sigs
let's just hope that ubuntu supports these drivers I want to install ubuntu on my laptop, but I am afraid. ahh
in the world of graphic cards, yes.
anything older then 2 versions is considered jurrasic, anything over 3 is ancient and anything over that is completly obsolete...to bad developers don't get that little factoid, their bastards for actually caring about budget gamers and ones who don't rush out to upgrade their systems.
CURSE THEM I SAY!!!
yes that part about developers was a joke, I was shocked to see I can run Half-Life 2 on almost high settings with my Radeon all in wonder 9200.
Aero Glass requires a DirectX 9 class GPU that supports Windows Display Driver Model (WDDM). Low-end mobile GPUs that meet this requirement include GeForceFX Go5100, Mobility Radeon 9500/X300, and Intel GMA 950. Even GMA 900 (which a lot of current Centrino users have) should work if they write WDDM drivers for it, but I doubt they will.
Here's some links for those who want to see the Aero Glass mobile GPU requirements:
BTW, the "Vista Basic user experience" (formerly known as "Aero Basic") does not look like Windows XP (the GPU requirements will be similar to XP). In fact, I think many users will prefer this interface to Aero Glass. Here's some screenshots:
TO START
PRESS ANY KEY
Where's the 'ANY' key? I see Esk, Kitarl, and Pig-Up...
Comment removed based on user account deletion
C'mon now, nVidia is not that bad. Their drivers are actually quite good considering all the hoops they must get over to get their drivers to run on most configurations out there. If anything the kernel devs are to blame for not providing a standard and stable kernel driver interface. But of course nVidia are evil and deserve to get those problems because they don't exist in some magical utopian universe where everything is open source, or so the kernel devs seem to imply.
Unfortunately for us in North America, these notebooks are currently only available in Europe. Evesham Quest Series (scroll down) look amazing but quite pricey.
There's also a German company Wortmann that makes a much more affordable notebook at around 1000 Euros. Looks like we're holding our breath for a few months or calling up friends and relatives abroud to get them for now.
Those SLI results are quite impressive, almost double speedup. I have to wonder if a laptop might make a decent gaming rig. I could even put up with short battery life for gaming, so long as battery life for simple word processing / movie watching was decent.
Never heard of that distro, but there are a few well known games natively available under linux, Doom 3 amongst them. I got Steam + Half-life2 running on my Gentoo box really slowly on my Radeon under Wine though.
Yeah it's enough processing power; here's my question though: Will the video card run at full speed to render in 3D? My experience has been that once you initialize a 3D game on any computer, the video card will want to run at 100% GPU speed. I've never really seen a GPU adjust speed and run slower, it's always optimized to run at the fastest FPS it possibly can. This is going to be a serious noise/power issue unless Microsoft and the video card vendors can work on some sort of 3D mode that doesn't require the GPU to run at full speed all the time. It would still need to run at 60fps though to match the LCD refresh rate, it would be unacceptable for the desktop performance to be any less than it was in 2D mode (using the old GDI renderer??).
The legality of closed kernel modules depends on whether or not you consider modules as part of the GPL's fucked up definition of "derivative works". The more sane kernel devs like Linus don't like closed modules but nevertheless don't consider them in violation of the GPL.
And for the "business-friendly" thing, the GPL really is the best suited business-oriented open source license, because if you don't force modifications to be made public like most other licenses, companies will use this as a chance to get a free ride on the open source train by not giving back anything to the community.
Anyway, what people must understand is some drivers simply cannot be open source, notably video and wireless drivers. Look at Mac OS X: all hardware drivers are open source, save for... yep, video and wireless drivers. Think about it.
It's like Microsoft...only it's video cards. Pay the price while game makers catch up.
Ebay. Search for dell+9400+7800. There are some available in this price range.
My other option is to buy one of those desktop replacement mammoths (which, oddly, some people still call notebooks). But it is a completely ridiculous solution. I like the mobility, convenience, integration I get from my ultraportable notebook. It is definitely a step in the right direction. It is the future. Agreed, but I simply cannot give up PC gaming.
I have a usb hub which is connected to my external hard disk (300 gb), external dvd burner, optical mouse, and 7.1 speakers via audigy 2. I really use all that only when I am on my desk, at home. Why can't I also have an external graphics card (with its own power supply and cooling solution), that I can connect to when I am in a mood for some serious gaming?
I would happily pay $300-400 for an external graphics card (USB or otherwise), that I can upgrade at will and use with my other computers. Is it technically impossible to do something like this? Or is it one of those things where all the companies have mutually agreed upon to keep screwing the unsuspecting consumers.
Please don't tell me I need a desktop. I like the notebook mobility, and do not see a point in paying for another set of software and OS licenses for a gaming desktop.
ok, I'm confused. The linked article shows the Go 7800GTX beating the Mobility Radeon x1800.
This article shows the mobile x1800 with a slight lead. What gives? What's different between 3dMark05 and 3dMark06, and what does it mean in for real games? They're all pretty nice cards and would be great for a gaming laptop... now if only I could find one with a core duo and a 15" screen instead of all those 17" monsters.
Anyone have any more benchmarks or knowledge to contribute?
I am the very model of a modern major general!
nVidia advertises a UNIFIED DRIVER ARCHITECTURE. That means that drivers for a 7900 should still recognize a GeForce 2 card. The need for some pre-formatted or manually-edited .inf file means SOMETHING IS WRONG AND NVIDIA IS AT FAULT. If you have to MANUALLY EDIT A FILE that should by all means automatically say "Look, here's the card!" then you've GOT A PROBLEM. That Unified-across-the-board driver suddenly isn't so unified, is it? Betcha they start cutting out support for slightly older cards to make room for their newer cards, and on top of that, they STILL have yet to deliver live, realtime cinematic graphics to the desktop, even though they've been advertising it since the GeForceFX chipset came out *I've got a poster hanging on my wall from the GeForceFX 5200 series, BTW, so bite me. I've still not seen graphics that compare to that poster real-time, PERIOD. Not even F.E.A.R.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
"Anyway, what people must understand is some drivers simply cannot be open source, notably video and wireless drivers. Look at Mac OS X: all hardware drivers are open source, save for... yep, video and wireless drivers. Think about it."
I'm sorry, I don't understand why you say that. Can you explain what you mean?
It's not illegal to develop them. Distributing them to others might be more of a problem.
No, it hasn't been released yet.
Should have been released March 22, but has since been delayed. No one has said for how long.
It's not the "GPL's fucked up definition". It's the legal definition that matters. The GPL just says it applies to derivative works - it probably varies from country to country whether the modules count, and may well be unclear - most copyright laws weren't designed with programming in mind. But it's unfair to blame the GPL.
Anyway, what people must understand is some drivers simply cannot be open source, notably video and wireless drivers. Look at Mac OS X: all hardware drivers are open source, save for... yep, video and wireless drivers. Think about it.
Not so long ago there were other sets of drivers that were never open source. What makes you so sure these won't be opened up?
I am trolling
But have a hard time finding one. I want 64-bit (which only AMDs Turion line has support for), and a NVidia graphics card (preferabbly one with dedicated memory) because we all know how great ATI's Linux drivers are. Any recommendations. Almost all the Turion laptops I see come with Radeon XPress GPUs. What brands sell such a configuration?
I realize these were just released, but how do you find affordable notebooks using currently available nVidia gaming chips? They always seem to come at a ridiculous premium.
$8.95/mo web hosting
This is classic slashdot these days. IMO, the 80/20 rule applies. 80% of the mods have their heads stuck up their asses these days. It constantly amazes me how stupid the moderators can get around here. If the moderators were worth a damn, as they were 4+ years ago, this type of crap would have already been fixed. Sadly, as /. has become more main stream, the IQ of the reader base (and thus the mods) have dropped into the toilet. As you rightly point out, most can not even infer basic facts, logic, or bring any knowledge to the table.
/. is rapidly going down hill because there are so many completely fucking retarded people running around here these days.
The best thing you can do is meta mod as much as possible. It used to be, some years ago, I might have to correct the moderation once or twice every three or four meta moderations. These days, I have to fix things three or four times every meta moderation. That clearly indicates that the current readers (therefore mods), are completely retarded and have not a clue what the fuck they are doing.
I hate to say it, but
The nvidia drivers are excellent these days. Several years ago, if you had crappy chipset, you probably had problems. These days, nvidia is rock solid, fast, provide accurate rendering, and easy to install. The ATI drivers suck ass. If you want solid, fast, stable 3d performance for Linux, nvidia is your only option...which is not to say it's a bad option.
Anyone that uses anything other than nvidia and expects a stable, high performance solution, are either uninformed or just plain stupid. Nvidia has been standing with Linux for a long time now and they provide a first class driver. Anyone that spurns Nvidia as a viable Linux solution are just wacky zealots. And frankly, I could care less if a zealot wants to complain.
Want to start up a site that does do real news for nerds? Forget stuff that matters, as that only serves to bring flamebait and trolls. I joined /. hoping this would be a technology discussion forum, instead, it's just a shit-slinging fest. Go check out my comment about being raped in jail and look at the tards (who've not been thru prison like I have, mind you) fall right in line to tell me I'm wrong, when I've been thru it firsthand and they've not. It's quite funny, honestly. We should just start up a pure technology discussion forum, and leave this place to burn in it's blissful ignorance.
Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
Anyway, what people must understand is some drivers simply cannot be open source, notably video and wireless drivers. Look at Mac OS X: all hardware drivers are open source, save for... yep, video and wireless drivers. Think about it.
That's retarded. Look at the multitude of open source wireless drivers. Look at every single ATI video card before r300 (and even r300 is getting some support now). Video and wireless drivers can be just as open source as the rest of the system, just the manufacturers of the various chipsets don't want that to happen. They seem to think (justifiably or not) that opening their drivers would either give their competitors an advantage, or in the case of wireless, open them up to legal issues if their customers modify the driver to transmit on other frequencies or otherwise fuck with things.
Of course, in my mind both of those are bogus claims, because a company who has engineers capable of designing a 300+ million transistor GPU can surely find the people to reverse-engineer a mere driver. With regards to the wireless issue, since when have manufacturers been liable for what a customer does with their gear? Ford's not liable for me going well above 100MPH on public roads, so why should Broadcom be worried about me tweaking their chipset to transmit on another frequency?
I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
What about licensed patents and third-party code? Do you really think video card manufacturers own all the code contained in their drivers? What makes you think they are legally capable of opening up their drivers?
As for wireless, the FCC requires that 802.11g wireless drivers can't be modified. It's not the manufacturers' fault they can't open them. Yes, Broadcom sucks for not providing any support at all, but that's another issue. OTOH Intel does provide closed Linux drivers for their wireless hardware. If that makes you unhappy, complain to the FCC.
Welcome to reality. Not everything can be open source. It's as simple as that.