Computex 2005 Day 1 - ATI R520 Sighting, NVIDIA's new Chipset
by Anand Lal Shimpi on May 31, 2005 6:41 AM EST- Posted in
- Trade Shows
Day one of Computex has already been quite eventful; we've seen yet another working R520 demo performing some impressive H.264 GPU acceleration, as well as motherboards based on NVIDIA's new C51G. All that and much more in this Computex article...
The H.264 specification is particularly important as it will be the predominant encoding/decoding standard for both blu-ray and HD-DVD. Being able to accelerate H.264 encoding, decoding and transcoding will soon be the new focus of system performance. If you've played around with either encoding H.264 content or playing back the limited amount of H.264 content currently available, you know that the overall system demands for anything dealing with H.264 are quite high.
ATI is addressing one part of the problem by offering GPU-accelerated H.264 decoding with the R520. The demo was conducted on 25Mbps HD footage recorded using a HD video camera and played back on a Pentium 4 3.6GHz system (Hyper Threading enabled) with a R520 graphics card.
Obviously, the story of the day happens to be ATI's CrossFire multi-GPU solution, and ATI had some CrossFire demos running in their suite as well.
Just like all of the other chipset makers, ATI had a wall of motherboards based on ATI chipsets at their suite:
ATI Demos R520, Accelerates H.264 Decoding
ATI's R520 has made its second appearance in the past couple of weeks, this time behind not-so-closed doors at ATI's suite in the Hyatt hotel.
The H.264 specification is particularly important as it will be the predominant encoding/decoding standard for both blu-ray and HD-DVD. Being able to accelerate H.264 encoding, decoding and transcoding will soon be the new focus of system performance. If you've played around with either encoding H.264 content or playing back the limited amount of H.264 content currently available, you know that the overall system demands for anything dealing with H.264 are quite high.
ATI is addressing one part of the problem by offering GPU-accelerated H.264 decoding with the R520. The demo was conducted on 25Mbps HD footage recorded using a HD video camera and played back on a Pentium 4 3.6GHz system (Hyper Threading enabled) with a R520 graphics card.
Obviously, the story of the day happens to be ATI's CrossFire multi-GPU solution, and ATI had some CrossFire demos running in their suite as well.
Just like all of the other chipset makers, ATI had a wall of motherboards based on ATI chipsets at their suite:
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Dmitheon - Tuesday, May 31, 2005 - link
G70 behind closed door? Boo!Imaginer - Tuesday, May 31, 2005 - link
But with Iwill's dual SFF, no RAMDisk for you unless one is made with PCI-E slots in mind.Googer - Tuesday, May 31, 2005 - link
ATI's GPU accelarated VIDEO playback, now that is something to get excited about. So is iWILL's new SFF dual sokcket, dual core, Dual HTT, and DUAL GPU SLI.Googer - Tuesday, May 31, 2005 - link
#1 SSD is not a new technology, so there is really nothing to be exicted about. If you wan't one you can go out and buy one here and now, then have it installed then next day after you get it from UPS.AnnihilatorX - Tuesday, May 31, 2005 - link
#1 Solid state HDD s are not impressive at all. They are simple technology and simple to implement. It's just that the memory chips are expensive and data densit not high enough so they are so rare and considered a premium thing to get hold with.avijay - Tuesday, May 31, 2005 - link
Interesting to see more things about server implementations.Brian23 - Tuesday, May 31, 2005 - link
None of that was as impressive as the solid state hard drive.