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U.S. company unveils ‘most powerful’ graphics chip, made in India

shrivatsa

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The Hindu : Front Page : U.S. company unveils ‘most powerful’ graphics chip, made in India

BANGALORE: The mathematics is really quite simple: if a new processor delivers five times the number-crunching power over comparable options, in one-half the size, it is a ten-fold improvement of silicon performance. U.S.-based visual computing leader NVIDIA claimed this last week, when it unveiled its latest graphical processing platform for portable application. The 54 gigaflops (that is, 54 billion computer operations per second) that the chip delivers makes it the ‘most powerful integrated graphics processor in the market today,’ said its makers.

Indian engineers at the company’s Bangalore-based Research and Development Centre substantially developed the thumb-nail-sized chip. “From designing the chip architecture to translating it into a form that can be handed over to a silicon foundry to fabricate, pretty much all the hardware work was done by our India team,” Sridhar Manthani, Senior Director, told The Hindu. Software support came from the U.S.-based teams.

The GeForce 9400M is a single-chip solution – in an industry in which at least two chips are normally required to do the job. It has16 cores, or computing units, working simultaneously to handle complex challenges posed by customers. Yet, the chip is much less power-hungry than its predecessors – which means users can view a full-length movie in the upcoming High Definition format without having to recharge the batteries of their notebook computers.

Even as the 70-strong group of engineers here worked for over 18 months to deliver the product, potential customers – PC makers – were trying out early samples. And first off the block, with a family of notebook computers fuelled by the 9400M, is Apple which has used it to fuel the new MacBook family, due to be launched in India next week.
 
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good news every body know we have minds but we don't have resorces
 
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54 gigs. OMG:cheesy:

Is it compatible with the desktop motherboards too. My comp is pretty old now,

AMD 3000+ 1.85 gigs:hitwall:
Geforce 7300 GS:hitwall:
2 GB RAM

Most of my friends have moved on to quads and Ge force8800s and ATI 4850s.

Anyways one of my neighbours works for AMD. He said that all future desktop processors will be built in with graphic cards. They are designing it here in bangalore.
 
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54 gigs. OMG:cheesy:

Is it compatible with the desktop motherboards too. My comp is pretty old now,

AMD 3000+ 1.85 gigs:hitwall:
Geforce 7300 GS:hitwall:
2 GB RAM

Most of my friends have moved on to quads and Ge force8800s and ATI 4850s.

Anyways one of my neighbours works for AMD. He said that all future desktop processors will be built in with graphic cards. They are designing it here in bangalore.


wait yar we will get this soon:cheers:
 
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Its a nice option for laptops however its not in the same domain as my 9800 GX2 SLI configuration :P.

So did Indians design the GPU or is the card being made there?
 
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Its a nice option for laptops however its not in the same domain as my 9800 GX2 SLI configuration :P.

So did Indians design the GPU or is the card being made there?

:cheers:

So, hows Crysis warhead.:bounce:

So many processors and cards have been designed in india.
Add Intel Core2duo to the list too.

I guess all of AMD, Intel and ATI designs will be carried out in india. Not too sure about nvidia though. but it is possible Intels tie up with nvidia may result in indian designs.
My cousin works for IBM. He told me that there is a chance that IBM may move its entire R&D operation to india.

Anyways, India does all the "designing" while china does all the "manufacturing."
 
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Its a nice option for laptops however its not in the same domain as my 9800 GX2 SLI configuration :P.

So did Indians design the GPU or is the card being made there?


Sorry pal, the 9800 is no where close to the 9400M.
The core clock is only 738 Mhz compared to the 9400M's 54 Ghz

They are meant for different purposes.

But this is the future of graphic card technology. The idea of a seperate processor and a seperate graphics card is obsolete.

The Geforce 9 series from nvidia and the 4800 series from ATI are the last of the graphics cards. The Future if Fusion.:victory:
 
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Sorry pal, the 9800 is no where close to the 9400M.
The core clock is only 738 Mhz compared to the 9400M's 54 Ghz

They are meant for different purposes.

But this is the future of graphic card technology. The idea of a seperate processor and a seperate graphics card is obsolete.

The Geforce 9 series from nvidia and the 4800 series from ATI are the last of the graphics cards. The Future if Fusion.:victory:


Just clarifying about technology -- In news article it mentioned 54 gigaflops not 54 gigahertz, normally processor performance is measured in flops/second which means FLOating Point operations Per Second. Ideally the processor clock is not the sole measure in judging processor performance. The graphics card chips these days use the clock speed in the range of 500Mhz-1.2Ghz and the performance is achieved through massive parallel execution units. The graphics processor which is designed in India is very much an entry level as the graphics processor unlike ATI 48XX or nvidia 280 have already crossed 1000 gigaflops barrier. Whats innovative in this new chip is, it is an all in one package for north bridge, south bridge and an entry level integrated graphics processor which which reduces chip space on motherboard. This chip is mainly designed to use in notebook motherboards and they are used in newly launched macbooks.
 
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:cheers:

So, hows Crysis warhead.:bounce:

So many processors and cards have been designed in india.
Add Intel Core2duo to the list too.

I guess all of AMD, Intel and ATI designs will be carried out in india. Not too sure about nvidia though. but it is possible Intels tie up with nvidia may result in indian designs.
My cousin works for IBM. He told me that there is a chance that IBM may move its entire R&D operation to india.

Anyways, India does all the "designing" while china does all the "manufacturing."

Intel, Nvidia and AMD have invested hugely in India as they are getting very high quality manpower and protection for their intellectual property. After cisco-Huawei episode, corporations are getting cautious about investing in china. Not only hardware companies, the software companies are placing big bets in India R&D. IBM, MS and Google are expanding their operations in India. Infact i was astonished to know that 70% of sybase database development and 80% of veritas software (now symantec) development happens in Pune.
 
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Just clarifying about technology -- In news article it mentioned 54 gigaflops not 54 gigahertz, normally processor performance is measured in flops/second which means FLOating Point operations Per Second. Ideally the processor clock is not the sole measure in judging processor performance. The graphics card chips these days use the clock speed in the range of 500Mhz-1.2Ghz and the performance is achieved through massive parallel execution units. The graphics processor which is designed in India is very much an entry level as the graphics processor unlike ATI 48XX or nvidia 280 have already crossed 1000 gigaflops barrier. Whats innovative in this new chip is, it is an all in one package for north bridge, south bridge and an entry level integrated graphics processor which which reduces chip space on motherboard. This chip is mainly designed to use in notebook motherboards and they are used in newly launched macbooks.

Yea you are right. My bad.
ATIs 4870X2 work at 2.4 teraflops
 
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Nice to know RE: AMD, Intel and from my side add TI-the original and pioneer of chip labs in Bangalore.

Even in US, Asians from China, India, Iranians, Pak.'s, Taiwanchicks, Sing., & S. Vietnamese, Koreans & Japaniis are over-represented.
Also Russians, East Eropeanns, and the mix of UK, German & Israel also there.

So on a per capita basis, I'd say India is somewhat under-represented. But if on pure number basis, US high-tech industry is totally 'owned' by immigrant Indians AND their counterparts left behind in R&D labs in India; far more than any other nation except perhaps China. Korea, Taiwan, Japan, Sing., Gemany, UK also have significant # of Inidian immigrants working there AND they have solid labs in India also.

In future, if Ukraininains, Thai & Dubai-istaniis ;) want to make chips, I strongly recommend start small by outsourcing to Indian Co.'s who have good skills, and build up from there and then outsource to more developed places or bring the work home and hire Globally. Specially security, intelligence and signals chips.
 
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Intel Core i7 920 3.2 ghz, 6 Gigs of Corsair Ram DDR3 1333 Mhz, nVidia 260 GTX SuperClock 896 MB, MotherBoard AsRock aka "ASUS" ATX58

-Pzzzz LATE..
 
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Forgot to mention LOL 9400M nVidia I would say is a decent card for a laptop but for a desktop, you can't be serious. nVidia always makes random series card and calls it a higher end series cards for example you can have an nVidia 9600 GS, but the 8800 GTX would out perform by miles. Or like the nVidia 6200, the 5500 would out perform it. Or the 200 series cards like 210 GS, the 9800 will out perform it.
 
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