Introduction
NV1
When we took at a
look
at NVIDIA's new integrated graphics chipsets for
Intel's LGA775 processors
- GeForce 9300 and 9400 - our thoughts were that the single-chip
solution was, comfortably, the best IGP solution for Intel's
volume-selling desktop parts.
But looking past the desktop MCP7A, we mused that "as decent as MCP7A
looks on the desktop its real worth is in mobile (laptop) form, where a
decent IGP can serve as an enabler of basic gaming and cutting-edge
multimedia playback. As it so happens, Apple has announced that it will
take the laptop variant, MCP79 (GeForce 9400M), and use it in
MacBook
Pro and MacBook Air laptops, beginning next month.
MCP79 will be especially useful in thin-and-light notebooks that have
limited room for discrete graphics cards".
The mobile variant, led by Apple's MacBook range, makes a lot of sense
for mid-to-high-end laptops that could do with a decent graphics card
for multimedia and gaming use, but wouldn't it be even cooler if the
same technology could be applied to a different end of the market - the
netbook? That's precisely what
we
conjectured upon last week.
NVIDIA reckons this makes implicit sense, too, as it is announcing,
today, a
new platform, dubbed ION, that marries the potent GeForce 9400M to
Intel's well-received Atom processor.
What that potentially means is a thin-and-light (sub-1.5kg) laptop that
doesn't cost the earth but can play basic games and provide much-needed
multimedia functionality.
Let's take a closer look.