HardwareHeaven.com
Looking for the skin chooser?
 
 
  • Home

  • Reviews

  • Articles

  • News

  • Tools

  • GamingHeaven

  • Forums

  • Network

 

Go Back   HardwareHeaven.com > Forums > News > Other Tech News


Other Tech News The latest community based technology news from across the globe. (If you aren't a community newsposter then use the "Submit News" section.)

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old Jul 12, 2004, 11:48 AM   #1
DriverHeaven Founder
 
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 32,480
Rep Power: 177
Zardon has a reputation beyond refuteZardon has a reputation beyond refuteZardon has a reputation beyond refuteZardon has a reputation beyond refuteZardon has a reputation beyond refuteZardon has a reputation beyond refuteZardon has a reputation beyond refuteZardon has a reputation beyond refuteZardon has a reputation beyond refuteZardon has a reputation beyond refuteZardon has a reputation beyond refute

Intel Grantsdale hitting demand for low-end GPUs?

Is Intel's i915G chipset - the integrated version of 'Grantsdale' - hitting Nvidia and ATI's share of the low-end graphics market? If a report that the two graphics chip specialists have cut their entry-level part wafer-starts is accurate, that would certainly seem to be the case.

According to a story posted by DigiTimes, citing industry sources, ATI and Nvidia have made just such a move. The latter has reportedly cut NV34 starts by up to 66 per cent, while ATI has reduced RV280 starts by an unknown amount.

The story focuses on the need to ease 140nm and 150nm process production at the two companies' foundry partners, TSMC and UMC. Demand for products fabbed at both nodes is said to be strong, while supply is tight.

But the story's sources also claim that big-name PC OEMs are turning to the i915G and its integrated Media Accelerator 900 engine instead of entry-level graphics solutions. That, the sources suggest, has in turn forces ATI and Nvidia to scale back production.

It's no great surprise perhaps. Intel is already the world's biggest supplier of graphics chip technology, entirely due to its integrated chipsets. With a DirectX 9-compatible engine in Grantsdale - well, at the pixel shader level; MA900 lacks hardware vertex shader support - it can't help but increase its market share.

Short-term respite may come courtesy of the Grantsdale recall. While shipments of the chipset have apparently resumed, mobo-maker sources say boards won't ship in volume until the end of the month. But that still leaves the whole of August for Granstdale-based systems to be offered to back-to-school buyers.

register
Zardon is offline   Reply With Quote


Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools