Guess what the first word of this Nvidia video is? a) Welcome b) Today c) Intel
The Tegra demonstration is impressive, showing HD video content being decoded in around 1W instead of 12W but they clearly didn’t cover all bases. For a start, you can’t even run a big screen backlight at 1W and if I’m doing my research correctly I can see that Tegra doesn’t include a communications and radio subsystem. Even so, what exactly are they trying to compare here? They are putting a general purpose CPU (i’m guessing its Celeron there) against a dedicated video codec in a video decoding test. Not only that, they are showing their new tech against Intel’s old tech. Booo!
I’m sure the NVidia board is impressive but come on guys, lets see you doing some general purpose computing with Wifi, BT, 3G, storage, USB and compare it against a Silverthorne/Poulsbo combo that will do the same in a MID-sized board in under 5W. Bring out the MIDs Nvidia. Or better still, send them to me and I’ll perform a special selection of Chippy tests on them.
Check out this Nvidia MID, pretty cool looking responsive 3D graphics on such a portable device: http://youtube.com/watch?v=lKcqBAPhDc0
I supposed Nvidia are using an ARM chip and they are providing the low power DSP to do graphics and video playback.
I wonder what nVidia are measuring in this video. If its only the Tegra chip, 1.2W is quite a lot for an ARM-based SoC.
I stumbled across these NVIDIA Tegra devices today. One word, phenomenal.
I cannot wait for the Tegra 650 to come onto the market, until then I will try and abait my ‘waiting’ frustration with an Archos 5g!
http://www.nvidia.com/page/handheld.html
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQa9nP4yyms
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U7R90A7ZqLU
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