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      AMD pulls back on drivers for aging-but-popular graphics cards and iGPUs

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Thursday, 9 November - 18:00 · 1 minute

    AMD's RX 480, which got good reviews back in 2016 for its performance and budget-friendly $200 starting price.

    Enlarge / AMD's RX 480, which got good reviews back in 2016 for its performance and budget-friendly $200 starting price. (credit: Mark Walton)

    After a couple of years of cryptocurrency- and pandemic-fueled shortages, 2023 has been a surprisingly sensible time to buy a new graphics card. New midrange GPUs like Nvidia's GeForce RTX 4060 and AMD's Radeon RX 7600 haven't been huge upgrades over their predecessors, but they're at least reliable performers that you can consistently buy at or under their launch prices.

    If you've been hanging on to an old AMD Radeon GPU, though, there's some bad news: According to AnandTech, AMD is beginning to pull back on driver support for some of its late-2010s-era GPUs, most notably its Polaris and Vega GPU architectures. Support for these GPUs has already been removed from the company's Linux drivers , and Windows drivers for the GPUs will be limited mostly to "critical updates."

    "The AMD Polaris and Vega graphics architectures are mature, stable and performant and don’t benefit as much from regular software tuning," reads AMD's official statement. "Going forward, AMD is providing critical updates for Polaris- and Vega-based products via a separate driver package, including important security and functionality updates as available. The committed support is greater than for products AMD categorizes as legacy, and gamers can still enjoy their favorite games on Polaris and Vega-based products."

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      US surprises Nvidia by speeding up new AI chip export ban

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Tuesday, 24 October, 2023 - 21:07 · 1 minute

    The Nvidia H100 Tensor Core GPU

    Enlarge / A press photo of the Nvidia H100 Tensor Core GPU. (credit: Nvidia )

    On Tuesday, chip designer Nvidia announced in an SEC filing that new US export restrictions on its high-end AI GPU chips to China are now in effect sooner than expected, according to a report from Reuters . The curbs were initially scheduled to take effect 30 days after their announcement on October 17 and are designed to prevent China, Iran, and Russia from acquiring advanced AI chips.

    The banned chips are advanced graphics processing units (GPUs) that are commonly used for training and running deep learning AI applications similar to ChatGPT and AI image generators , among other uses. GPUs are well-suited for neural networks because their massively parallel architecture performs the necessary matrix multiplications involved in running neural networks faster than conventional processors.

    The Biden administration initially announced an advanced AI chip export ban in September 2022, and in reaction, Nvidia designed and released new chips , the A800 and H800, to comply with those export rules for the Chinese market. In November 2022, Nvidia told The Verge that the A800 "meets the US Government’s clear test for reduced export control and cannot be programmed to exceed it." However, the new curbs enacted Monday specifically halt the exports of these modified Nvidia AI chips. The Nvidia A100 , H100 , and L40S chips are also included in the export restrictions.

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      Build your dream desktop with these Prime Day PC components deals

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 11 October, 2023 - 19:15 · 6 minutes

    Nvidia's GeForce RTX 4080.

    Enlarge / Nvidia's GeForce RTX 4080. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

    If you're building a new PC, there's no time like Amazon's big Prime Day sale to grab a deal on PC parts. Components like fans, motherboards, CPUs, and GPUs are all on sale. Whether you're starting from scratch on building your own powerful gaming rig or workstation, or you're upgrading an existing build, we have some options.

    GPU deals on RTX graphics cards

    • ZOTAC Gaming GeForce RTX 3060 Twin Edge OC for $261 (was $340) at Amazon
    • ZOTAC Gaming GeForce RTX 4080 16GB Trinity OC for $990 (was $1,300) at Amazon
    • PowerColor Fighter AMD Radeon RX 6700 XT Gaming Graphics Card with 12GB GDDR6 Memory for $300 (was $350) at Amazon
    • ZOTAC Gaming GeForce RTX 4070 AMP AIRO Spider-Man: Across The Spider-Verse Inspired Graphics Card Bundle for $585 (was $700) at Amazon
    • EVGA GeForce RTX 2060 SC GAMING for $200 (was $360) at Amazon
    • Intel Arc A750 Limited Edition 8GB PCI Express 4.0 Graphics Card for $200 (was $220) at Amazon
    • ASUS Dual NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050 OC Edition Gaming Graphics Card for $230 (was $300) at Amazon
    • ASUS ROG Strix NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Gaming Graphics Card for $870 (was $950) at Amazon
    • XFX Speedster QICK319 Radeon RX 6750XT Gaming Graphics Card for $350 (was $430) at Amazon
    • XFX Speedster SWFT319 Radeon RX 6800 Gaming Graphics Card for $400 (was $490) at Amazon
    • ASUS TUF Gaming GeForce RTX 4060 Ti OC Edition Gaming Graphics Card for $415 (was $460) at Amazon

    Storage and RAM

    • Lexar NQ100 480GB 2.5-inch SATA III Internal SSD for $18 (was $33) at Amazon
    • Lexar NQ100 1.92TB 2.5-inch SATA III Internal SSD for $62 (was $88) at Amazon
    • Crucial P3 Plus 4TB PCIe Gen4 3D NAND NVMe M.2 SSD for $180 (was $226) at Amazon
    • Crucial P3 4TB PCIe Gen3 3D NAND NVMe M.2 SSD for $160 (was $230) at Amazon
    • Crucial MX500 4TB 3D NAND SATA 2.5 Inch Internal SSD for $165 (was $204) at Amazon
    • Crucial Pro RAM 64GB Kit DDR4 3200MT/s for $100 (was $142) at Amazon
    • Lexar NM790 SSD 2TB PCIe Gen4 NVMe M.2 2280 Internal Solid State Drive for $87 (was $125) at Amazon
    • Lexar NM790 SSD 1TB PCIe Gen4 NVMe M.2 2280 Internal Solid State Drive for $45 (was $70) at Amazon
    • Lexar NM790 SSD 512GB PCIe Gen4 NVMe M.2 2280 Internal Solid State Drive for $37 (was $50) at Amazon
    • Lexar ARES RGB 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 RAM 3600MT/s CL18 Desktop Memory for $55 (was $80) at Amazon
    • Crucial T700 4TB Gen5 NVMe M.2 SSD for $390 (was $600) at Amazon
    • Crucial T700 4TB Gen5 NVMe M.2 SSD with heatsink for $410 (was $630) at Amazon
    • Lexar NQ100 960GB 2.5-inch SATA III Internal SSD for $33 (was $48) at Amazon
    • Lexar ARES RGB 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 RAM 6000MT/s CL34 Desktop Memory for $76 (was $120) at Amazon
    • Lexar ARES RGB 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 RAM 5600MT/s CL32 Desktop Memory for $72 (was $110) at Amazon
    • PNY CS2241 4TB M.2 NVMe Gen4 x4 Internal Solid State Drive for $175 (was $220) at Amazon
    • CORSAIR VENGEANCE RGB DDR5 RAM 32GB (2x16GB) 5200 MHz CL40 for $90 (was $100) at Amazon

    CPU deals on Intel and AMD processors

    • Intel Core i5-12600KF Desktop Processor 10 (6P+4E) Cores for $163 (was $199) at Amazon
    • Intel Core i7-12700K Desktop Processor with Integrated Graphics for $239 (was $276) at Amazon
    • Intel Core i5-12600K Desktop Processor with Integrated Graphics for $179 (was $194) at Amazon
    • AMD Ryzen 9 5900X 12-core, 24-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor for $297 (was $570) at Amazon
    • Intel Core i7-13700K Desktop Processor with Integrated Graphics for $373 (was $419) at Amazon
    • AMD Ryzen 9 7900X 12-Core, 24-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor for $382 (was $549) at Amazon
    • AMD Ryzen 9 7950X 16-Core, 32-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor for $509 (was $699) at Amazon
    • AMD Ryzen 9 7950X3D 16-Core, 32-Thread Desktop Processor for $599 (was $699) at Amazon
    • AMD Ryzen 7 5800X3D 8-core, 16-Thread Desktop Processor for $307 (was $319) at Amazon
    • Intel Core i7-12700KF Desktop Processor for $219 (was $259) at Amazon
    • Intel Core i9-12900K Gaming Desktop Processor with Integrated Graphics and 16 (8P+8E) Cores for $327 (was $379) at Amazon
    • AMD Ryzen 7 5800X 8-core, 16-Thread Unlocked Desktop Processor for $215 (was $449) at Amazon
    • Intel Core i9-12900KF Desktop Processor for $318 (was $373) at Amazon
    • Intel Core i9-12900KS Gaming Desktop Processor for $349 (was $400) at Amazon

    Motherboards

    • ASUS Prime B550-PLUS AMD AM4 Zen 3 Ryzen 5000 & 3rd Gen Ryzen ATX Motherboard for $100 (was $140) at Amazon
    • GIGABYTE B650 Gaming X AX (AM5/ LGA 1718/ AMD/ B650 for $162 (was $200) at Amazon
    • ASUS ROG Maximus Z790 Hero (WiFi 6E) LGA 1700 (Intel 13th & 12th Gen) ATX Motherboard for $540 (was $609) at Amazon
    • Gigabyte B550 AORUS ELITE AX V2 for $144 (was $190) at Amazon
    • ASUS Prime Z790-A WiFi 6E LGA 1700 (Intel 13th & 12th) ATX Motherboard for $250 (was $310) at Amazon
    • ASUS TUF Gaming Z790-Plus WiFi D4 LGA 1700 (Intel 12th & 13th Gen) ATX Motherboard for $200 (was $230) at Amazon
    • ASUS Prime X670E-PRO WiFi Socket AM5 (LGA 1718) Ryzen 7000 ATX Motherboard for $290 (was $350) at Amazon
    • ASUS Strix STRIX Z790-A WIFI D4 Desktop Motherboard for $285 (was $350) at Amazon
    • MSI MPG Z690 Edge WiFi DDR4 Gaming Motherboard for $220 (was $300) at Amazon
    • GIGABYTE Z790 AORUS Elite AX DDR4 for $207 (was $260) at Amazon
    • MSI B550 Gaming GEN3 Gaming Motherboard for $100 (was $120) at Amazon
    • ASUS Prime X670-P Socket AM5 (LGA 1718) Ryzen 7000 ATX Motherboard for $200 (was $270) at Amazon
    • ASUS Prime H770-PLUS D4 Intel H770(13th and 12th Gen) LGA 1700 ATX Motherboard for $100 (was $160) at Amazon
    • ASUS ROG Strix B550-A Gaming AMD AM4 Zen 3 Ryzen 5000 & 3rd Gen Ryzen ATX Motherboard for $160 (was $180) at Amazon
    • MSI PRO Z790-A Wi-Fi ProSeries Motherboard (Supports 12th/13th Gen Intel Processors) for $190 (was $280) at Amazon
    • MSI MEG Z690 Unify Gaming Motherboard for $290 (was $330) at Amazon

    Power Supply Units

    • ASUS ROG STRIX 1000W Gold PSU, Power Supply for $160 (was $210) at Amazon
    • Cooler Master MWE Gold 850 V2 Full Modular for $95 (was $100) at Amazon
    • EVGA 100-N1-0650-L1, 650 N1, 650 W for $44 (was $65) at Amazon
    • EVGA Supernova 1600 G+, 80+ Gold 1600 W for $210 (was $350) at Amazon
    • Thermaltake Toughpower GF1 850 W 80+ Gold SLI/ CrossFire Ready Ultra Quiet 140mm Hydraulic Bearing Smart Zero Fan for $100 (was $140) at Amazon
    • Thermaltake Toughpower 750 W 80 Plus Gold Semi Modular PSU ATX for $80 (was $110) at Amazon
    • Thermaltake Toughpower GF3 850 W for $110 (was $160) at Amazon
    • EVGA SuperNOVA 1300 GT, 80 Plus Gold 1300 W for $180 (was $250) at Amazon
    • ASUS ROG Thor 850W Platinum II for $170 (was $250) at Amazon
    • EVGA Supernova 1000 P3, 80 Plus Platinum 1000 W for $210 (was $250) at Amazon
    • EVGA Supernova 1000 G7, 80 Plus Gold 1000 W for $180 (was $240) at Amazon
    • Thermaltake TOUGHLIQUID 360 ARGB Motherboard Sync All-in-One Liquid CPU Cooler for $100 (was $140) at Amazon
    • GIGABYTE GP-UD850GM PG5 Rev2.0 850W PCIe 5.0 Ready for $97 (was $140) at Amazon
    • Thermaltake Toughpower GF3 1350W for $208 (was $260) at Amazon
    • Corsair HX1000i Fully Modular Ultra-Low Noise ATX Power Supply - ATX 3.0 & PCIe 5.0 Compliant for $230 (was $260) at Amazon

    Fans and coolers

    • Cooler Master Hyper 212 Halo Black CPU Air Cooler for $33 (was $45) at Amazon
    • MSI MAG CoreLiquid 360R V2 - AIO ARGB CPU Liquid Cooler for $95 (was $140) at Amazon
    • NZXT Kraken 280 RGB - RL-KR280-B1 - 280 mm AIO CPU Liquid Cooler for $142 (was $200) at Amazon
    • Cooler Master MasterLiquid 360L Core 360 mm Close-Loop AIO Liquid Cooler for $101 (was $120) at Amazon
    • Cooler Master MasterLiquid 240L Core 240 mm Close-Loop AIO Liquid Cooler for $85 (was $100) at Amazon
    • AORUS WATERFORCE X 360 AIO Liquid CPU Cooler for $187 ($240) at Amazon
    • ASUS ROG RYUO III 360 ARGB All-in-one AIO Liquid CPU Cooler 360 mm Radiator for $245 (was $290) at Amazon
    • MSI MAG CoreLiquid C240 - AIO ARGB CPU Liquid Cooler - 240 mm Radiator for $90 (was $120) at Amazon
    • Thermaltake Riing Quad 120 mm 16.8 Million RGB Color 9 Blades Hydraulic Bearing Case/Radiator Fan for $90 (was $120) at Amazon

    Cases and towers

    • ASUS TUF Gaming GT501 Mid-Tower Computer Case for up to EATX Motherboards for $135 (was $180) at Amazon
    • ASUS TUF Gaming GT502 ATX Mid-Tower Computer Case for $140 (was $170) at Amazon
    • Thermaltake Tower 200 Mini-ITX Computer Case for $100 (was $130) at Amazon
    • CORSAIR Crystal Series 680X RGB High Airflow Tempered Glass ATX Smart Case, Black for $193 (was $275) at Amazon
    • Corsair 5000D Tempered Glass Mid-Tower ATX PC Case - White for $165 (was $175) at Amazon
    • Thermaltake Core P3 Pro E-ATX Tempered Glass Mid Tower for $120 (was $160) at Amazon
    • Antec NX200 M, Micro-ATX Tower, Mini-Tower Computer Case for $44 (was $65) at Amazon
    • Corsair iCUE 220T RGB AIRFLOW Tempered Glass Mid-Tower Smart ATX Case for $70 (was $125) at Amazon
    • Corsair Carbide Series 175R RGB Tempered Glass Mid-Tower ATX Gaming Case for $53 (was $85) at Amazon

    Ars Technica may earn compensation for sales from links on this post through affiliate programs .

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      Découverte du AK1PLUS – Le Mini PC Intel Alder Lake-N95 de NiPoGi

      news.movim.eu / Korben · Sunday, 8 October, 2023 - 14:35 · 5 minutes

    Si vous me lisez depuis longtemps, vous savez que je parle très peu matos sur ce site, car je suis du genre à garder mon matériel longtemps. Mais là, j’avais besoin d’un petit PC récent pour faire mes tests sous Windows et Linux.

    Pas besoin d’une grosse machine de gamer, ni d’un truc cher, donc je suis parti lurker un peu du côté des Mini PC. Et je suis tombé ce MiniPC AK1PLUS de la marque NiPoGi équipé d’un processeur Alder Lake-N95 (jusqu’à 3,4 GHz), de 16 Go de DDR4 ainsi que d’un SSD M.2 NVMe de 1 TB. Il peut également accueillir 2 écrans 4K et intègre tout le confort moderne en matière de connectivité USB, Ethernet, Wifi et Bluetooth.

    Alors oui, je sais que le Alder Lake-N95 c’est vu comme le fond du panier de chez Intel, mais vu que ça ne consomme pas grand-chose et que j’ai pas prévu de faire du gaming dessus (mis à part du Xbox Cloud), je n’en ai rien à faire. Moi j’ai juste besoin d’un truc qui ne prend pas de place, et sur lequel je pourrais faire un dual boot Windows / Linux pour bidouiller.

    De base, je trouve que ce AK1PLUS est plutôt cher vu le peu de matos qu’il y a dedans (439 euros au catalogue).

    Mais j’avais déjà pris un PC de chez eux et j’en suis content.

    Mais hors de question de l’acheter à ce prix là… Toutefois, ce qui m’a vraiment décidé c’est le bon de réduction de 210 € proposé sur Amazon qui fait qu’au final, je l’ai payé 229 euros. Je trouve que c’est son juste prix, surtout qu’à config équivalente, c’est le moins cher rapport à ses concurrents.

    Bref, pour une fois, je me suis dit que ce serait sympa de vous le présenter en détail sachant que ça fait bien longtemps que je n’avais pas testé un PC ici.

    Dans la toute petite boite, vous trouverez un manuel d’utilisation qui ne sert à rien, un support VESA pour le fixer au mur, derrière un écran ou encore sous un bureau ainsi qu’une alimentation et un câble HDMI.

    Au niveau du look de la bête, rien de spécial… C’est une petite boite noire d’environ 13 cm de côté sur 5 cm de haut avec un peu de LEDs bleues qui s’allument quand il fonctionne (ça peut se débrancher facilement si vous ne voulez pas que ça éclaire chez vous). Bref, c’est tout petit, parfait pour les amateurs de minimalisme, car ça peut même se planquer derrière un écran ou dans un tiroir.

    Niveau connectivité, y’a un port USB et le bouton d’allumage sur le côté droit afin que ce soit accessible et le reste de la connectique se trouve à l’arrière. Soit au total 4 ports USB, 2 HDMI, 1 Ethernet et une prise casque.

    Un truc que j’avais pas capté en achetant ce truc, c’est qu’il dispose d’un socle amovible dans lequel on peut rajouter un SSD. Donc ça fait une bonne extension en matière d’espace disque pour ceux qui ont besoin de place, par exemple si vous voulez vous en faire un média center. Pour ma part, je l’ai retiré pour le moment.

    Ensuite au niveau de l’install de l’OS, rien à dire de spécial si ce n’est que c’est livré avec un Windows 11 Pro.

    Je m’interrogeais quand même sur la possibilité de mettre un Linux là-dessus, et c’est passé comme une lettre à la poste en dual boot (c’est de l’UEFI). J’ai juste dû passer sur un noyau Linux 6.5.6 pour avoir un bon support du processeur graphique d’Intel qui est quand même récent et donc avoir ainsi une résolution d’écran correcte.

    Par contre, attention, si vous vous lancez là-dedans, sachez que le seul port USB réellement bootable est celui qui se trouve à l’arrière. J’ai perdu pas mal de temps à essayer de comprendre pourquoi ma clé USB ne voulait pas booter alors que je l’avais branché dans les ports USB situés à droite de la machine.

    Comme j’ai 1 TB sur le Nvme, j’ai divisé le disque en 2 partitions de 500 GB chacune, ce qui sera largement suffisant pour ce que je vais en faire.

    Évidemment comme je suis curieux, je l’ai démonté pou voir à quoi ça ressemblait dedans. C’est assez facile, il suffit d’enlever les patins du dessous, qui cachent les vis. Puis de l’ouvrir délicatement par le haut, en prenant garde de ne pas arracher les fils pour les LEDs bleues.

    Voici l’intérieur de la bête.

    Comme vous le voyez, l’alimentation des LEDs peut être facilement déconnectée. Et ensuite, c’est assez basique, y’a pas grand chose. Un gros radiateur / ventilo vraiment très silencieux. Et un NVme de marque BiWIN… Aucune idée de ce que vaut ce dernier, mais comme on peut le remplacement facilement, je ne suis pas inquiet.

    J’ai enlevé le radiateur quand même pour voir le processeur avec sa bonne dose de pâte thermique.

    Voilà pour le petit retour côté matos. C’est donc un mini PC silencieux et discret, avec un CPU récent et performant pour peu que vous vous contentiez de faire de la bureautique / internet / mater des films avec.

    Ça conviendra bien à ceux qui ont un petit budget, qui veulent un minimum d’encombrement et surtout du silence 🙂 et comme ça supporte très bien Linux, y’a de quoi faire aussi d’autres trucs cool.

    Par contre, encore une fois, oubliez les usages qui demandent du GPU. C’est loin d’être un PC avec lequel on peut jouer à des jeux récents ou faire de la 3D.

    Notez que d’autres modèles sont également dispo chez NiPoGi avec moins d’espace disque, moins de RAM, donc moins chers (et également de chouettes bons de réduction).

    À voir maintenant ce que ça donnera sur le long terme.

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      Review: AMD’s Radeon RX 7700 XT and 7800 XT are almost great

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 6 September, 2023 - 13:00

    AMD's Radeon RX 7800 XT.

    Enlarge / AMD's Radeon RX 7800 XT. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

    Nearly a year ago, Nvidia kicked off this GPU generation with its GeForce RTX 4090 . The 4090 offers unparalleled performance but at an unparalleled price of $1,600 (prices have not fallen). It's not for everybody, but it's a nice halo card that shows what the Ada Lovelace architecture is capable of. Fine, I guess.

    The RTX 4080 soon followed, along with AMD's Radeon RX 7900 XTX and XT . These cards also generally offered better performance than anything you could get from a previous-generation GPU, but at still-too-high-for-most-people prices that ranged from between $900 and $1,200 (though all of those prices have fallen by a bit). Fine, I guess.

    By the time we got the 4070 Ti launch in May, we were getting down to the level of performance that had been available from previous-generation cards. These GPUs offered a decent generational jump over their predecessors (the 4070 Ti performs kind of like a 3090, and the 4070 performs kind of like a 3080). But those cards also got big price bumps that took them closer to the pricing levels of the last-gen cards they performed like. Fine, I guess.

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      Nvidia quietly cuts price of poorly reviewed 16GB 4060 Ti ahead of AMD launch

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 1 September, 2023 - 17:43

    The RTX 4060 Ti Founders Edition.

    Enlarge / The RTX 4060 Ti Founders Edition. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

    Last week, AMD announced what are probably the last major GPU launches of this generation of graphics cards: the $449 Radeon RX 7700 XT and $499 Radeon RX 7800 XT . AMD's pricing and performance numbers pit the cards against Nvidia's GeForce RTX 4060 Ti (specifically the $499 16GB version) and the $599 RTX 4070 .

    AMD's pricing is aggressive enough that Nvidia is quietly cutting the prices of some 16GB RTX 4060 Ti cards to $449, to match the RX 7700 XT. The announcement about the $50 reduction was buried toward the bottom of an email that Nvidia sent to GPU reviewers ahead of AMD's launch next week; it also drew attention to Nvidia-specific features like DLSS upscaling and frame generation, which compete with AMD's GPU-agnostic FSR , plus recent DLSS improvements that improve ray-tracing performance.

    "Finally, as a reminder, market prices can vary from the original launch MSRPs," Nvidia's Brian Burke wrote. "Today, GeForce RTX 4070 is widely available at $599, and GeForce RTX 4060 Ti 16GB is now available at $449. Both of these GPUs are great upgrade choices for gamers seeking their next GPU for the upcoming 2 to 3 years."

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      AMD Radeon RX 7700 XT and 7800 XT will go up against Nvidia’s 4070 and 4060 Ti

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 25 August, 2023 - 15:30 · 1 minute

    The specs of AMD's Radeon RX 7700 XT and 7800 XT.

    Enlarge / The specs of AMD's Radeon RX 7700 XT and 7800 XT. (credit: AMD)

    AMD has been slower than Nvidia to fill out its next-generation GPU lineup, and for months there has been a huge gap between the Radeon RX 7900 XT (currently retailing between $750 and $850) and the Radeon RX 7600 (holding steady at $270ish). Today, the company is finally filling in that gap with the new Radeon RX 7800 XT and RX 7700 XT, both advertised as 1440p graphics cards and available starting at $449 and $499, respectively. Both cards will be available on September 6. And most Radeon RX 6000 and RX 7000 GPUs sold between now and September 30 will come with a free copy of Bethesda's upcoming " Skyrim in space " title, Starfield.

    AMD kept the prices of both cards under wraps while pre-briefing members of the press about the announcement, which is unusual but not hard to explain. AMD's RX 7600 launch was spoiled a bit by Nvidia, which preempted the 7600's announcement by offering a more powerful GeForce RTX 4060 at the same $299 price that AMD had planned for the 7600. This prompted AMD to cut the 7600's price to $269 before it was even announced; we'll have to wait and see if Nvidia chooses to change its prices in response to the new Radeon cards' launch.

    The full lineup of RX 7000-series graphics cards. AMD pictures a reference version of the 7700 XT, though it won't be selling one.

    The full lineup of RX 7000-series graphics cards. AMD pictures a reference version of the 7700 XT, though it won't be selling one. (credit: AMD)

    The RX 7700 XT and 7800 XT are based on the same RDNA 3 graphics architecture as the other 7000-series GPUs, which means a more efficient manufacturing process than the RX 6000 series, DisplayPort 2.1 support, and hardware acceleration for encoding with the AV1 video codec, which promises game streamers either higher-quality video at the same bitrate as older codecs or the same quality with a lower bitrate. AMD compared the 7800 XT and 7700 XT favorably to Nvidia's $600 upper-midrange RTX 4070 and the $500 16GB version of the RTX 4060 Ti .

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      AMD’s FPS-doubling FSR 3 is coming soon, and not just to Radeon graphics cards

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Friday, 25 August, 2023 - 15:30 · 1 minute

    AMD's FSR 3 will compete with Nvidia's proprietary DLSS Frame Generation feature starting in September.

    Enlarge / AMD's FSR 3 will compete with Nvidia's proprietary DLSS Frame Generation feature starting in September. (credit: AMD)

    Even if you're not interested in buying one of the new Radeon graphics cards AMD announced today , the company still has some software-related announcements of interest to anyone who plays games on their PC. And that includes not just owners of older AMD GPUs but people who use Nvidia GeForce or Intel Arc cards, too.

    First, AMD is finally ready to reveal more details about FidelityFX Super Resolution version 3, the latest major update to the company's open source upsampling technology. A competitor to Nvidia's proprietary Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS) and Intel's GPU-agnostic but nascent XeSS, all of these technologies attempt to generate a high-resolution image by rendering a lower-resolution image, blowing it up and filling in the gaps algorithmically to approximate what a natively rendered image would have looked like.

    What GPUs support FSR 3?

    Last year, FSR 2.0 went a long way toward making the technology more competitive with DLSS while also working on a wider range of graphics hardware from AMD, Nvidia, and Intel. Contrary to some prior speculation, FSR 3 will continue to support a wide range of old and new GPUs from all three major GPU companies. AMD has confirmed to us that the following graphics hardware should all support FSR 3:

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      GeForce RTX 4060 review: Not thrilling, but a super-efficient $299 workhorse

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 28 June, 2023 - 13:00

    PNY's take on the basic $299 version of the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060.

    Enlarge / PNY's take on the basic $299 version of the Nvidia GeForce RTX 4060. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

    Nvidia's GeForce 1060, 2060, and 3060 graphics cards are some of the most widely used GPUs in all of PC gaming. Four of Steam's top five GPUs are 60-series cards, and the only one that isn't is an even lower-end GTX 1650.

    All of this is to say that, despite all the fanfare for high-end products like the RTX 4090, the new GeForce RTX 4060 is Nvidia's most important Ada Lovelace-based GPU. History suggests that it will become a baseline for game developers to aim for and the go-to recommendation for most entry-level-to-mainstream PC gaming builds.

    The RTX 4060, which launches this week starting at $299, is mostly up to the task. It's faster and considerably more power efficient than the 3060 it replaces, and it doesn't come with the same generation-over-generation price hike as the higher-end Lovelace GPUs. It's also a solid value compared to the 4060 Ti, typically delivering between 80 and 90 percent of the 4060 Ti's performance for 75 percent of the money.

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