Chipzilla goes all open saucy
Published in Graphics


GPUs based around fully open-source drivers

Intel GPUs from the consumer desktop Arc Graphics hardware to the Intel Data Center Flex GPU Series "Arctic Sound M" and forthcoming Xe HPC Ponte Vecchio are built around fully open-source drivers and will cheerfully even run on Linux.

Intel might lop off its GPU unit
Published in News


Losing too much money

Jon Peddie Research thinks Intel might chop its Accelerated Computing Systems and Graphics Group (AXG).

Intel confirms Arc A780 graphics card was never planned
Published in Graphics


A770 remains top

Intel’s Ryan Shrout, part of the Intel marketing group, used his Twitter to confirm that the Arc A780 card never existed.

Crypto winter brings plummeting GPU prices
Published in News


Oh dear, how sad, never mind


Falling crypto prices are causing GPU prices to drop below MSRP across the board.

ARM announces Immortalis GPU today
Published in News


Includes ray tracing on mobile

ARM is announcing its new flagship Immortalis GPU today, its first to include hardware-based ray tracing on mobile.

Arm details client roadmap until 2024
Published in Mobiles


Analysis:
Multi cluster nodes for the future

Arm has organized an in-person event for the willing, senior management, and engineering groups from different CPU and GPU groups with a lot to share.

Intel flagship Arc desktop GPU shows up at IEM 2022
Published in Graphics


Desktop Alchemist behind a dual-fan design

While we have already seen the flagship Intel Arc desktop graphics card in a teaser video, it made a surprise appearance at the Intel Extreme Masters (IEM) 2022 in Dallas, USA

GPU shipments down in Q1 2022
Published in News


But the future looks good

Jon Peddie Research (JPR) has released its report for Q1 2022 GPU shipments, which reached 96 million units, or a drop of 6.2 percent.

GPUs start to reach MSRP
Published in Graphics


Two years of inflated prices over

The current generation of RTX Ampere and RDNA 2 GPUs from Nvidia and AMD are about to reach MSRP levels.

Nvidia publishes Linux GPU kernel modules
Published in Graphics


Promises to maintain it

Nvidia, which is named after a Roman vengeance daemon, is publishing their Linux GPU kernel modules as open-source and has sworn by its dark gods to maintain them.