Sounds very interesting, they going to do this in mini-itx or just pico? I always find pico-itx to be prohibitively expensive for my shoddy mods but mini-itx is small enough for me.
I would love to see this on an MATX system, more PCIe slots would improve its expandability since every current atom implementation I've seen has one PCI slot only!
As Doug says really.
Hopefully this will be out by the time I start thinking of building a nice new media centre, twin it with a dual core atom and you realy do have a winner of a media centre board, though of course for that I would want it in ITX size.
i wonder whether Apple will re-release Apple TV with this in it. i really need something to replace my 6 year old PC that's sitting next to the TV downstairs, it can't even decode high bit-rate x264!
If they sell the box as is shown on the right. Then i see a great potential HTPC docking platform. Put a external BR dvd on usb into it. Or get some content from the network. Now only one thing to know if > 10" is actually full HD capability with encoding Full HD content without hiccups...
yeah this has so much potential. love the full HD capability, coupled with a dual core atom, this really could be the HTPC dream machine. small, low power, yet modern and fully capable of using up sonme of those spare parts left over from more recent high end builds (PCI-e, PCI slots, DDR2, DDR3)
yeah i want one, would be ace to replace the little desktop Optiplex i have in the kitchen right now
Originally Posted by DougEdey I would love to see this on an MATX system, more PCIe slots would improve its expandability since every current atom implementation I've seen has one PCI slot only!
it won't be micro, mini-ITX only. Atom does not belong on micro imo. There's enough space on mini-ITX if companies are inventive.
I think this is great news in many ways, very capable media devices etc, but imo the key issue is not performance as much as power. The great thing that goes a long way to make the atom setup so great is it's low power useage as well as small size. the power brick for my eee is only rated for 36w so the entire atom on full performance, it's screen, memory, ram, everything is only 36w max. That would barely run a standard hard drive set up for most of us! if this new nvidia set up maintains the atoms principle of low power consumpsion then we could be on to a winner with more gaming and media versions of eee's and their competitiors coming about. However, if it's not low power consumption then TBH what is the point? you will be cutting of its useability for a big portion of the market the atom is used for.
Ok, i know these things aren't in the slightest bit designed for gaming, but as I see myself in the target audience for these things (skint students), I care a lot more about frame rates on older games than I do about video encoding, even if we are playing on 10'' displays. In my lectures there's about 8 of us with EEEs, we love our Unreal Tournament GOTY ad-hoc LAN matches, but we want to branch out onto other slightly newer games. We have BF1942 Nam working but not fast enough for twitchy multiplayer, Quake 4 would be good if we had a little more power to get it working too. So, less focus on HD video encoding, more focus on older gamesv please Nvidia
Originally Posted by Icy EyeG You can't split the Atom
I'm *so* using this in my next article once I get some final kit :D
How about;
Quote:
They used to say you can't split an Atom, but by creating an ION, Nvidia has done just that
It's not technically splitting though when you're referring to electrons, but an Ion is "less" than an atom..
I've been bugging the PR all day to get the Pico box in so I can plug in a BD-ROM through eSATA and try out a Blu-ray box that's smaller than two 5.25" drives put together. I want to take pictures of it running on a HD projector :D
Looks like I've found my new media center. Yeah, I realize that's what half the replies in this thread say, but it's the truth. Atom, even dual-core Atom, can't really handle 1080p video playback for some of the more challenging codecs. Putting a modern video chipset in means we can take advantage of the relatively ludicrous power of video processing chipsets to play our movies in comfort.
Originally Posted by Bindibadgi it won't be micro, mini-ITX only. Atom does not belong on micro imo. There's enough space on mini-ITX if companies are inventive.
i would be more then interested in a mini itx mobo with a 330 atom and the nvidia chipset :D
Comments 1 to 26 of 44
Hopefully this will be out by the time I start thinking of building a nice new media centre, twin it with a dual core atom and you realy do have a winner of a media centre board, though of course for that I would want it in ITX size.
i wonder whether Apple will re-release Apple TV with this in it. i really need something to replace my 6 year old PC that's sitting next to the TV downstairs, it can't even decode high bit-rate x264!
I want it sooo much!...
yeah i want one, would be ace to replace the little desktop Optiplex i have in the kitchen right now
it won't be micro, mini-ITX only. Atom does not belong on micro imo. There's enough space on mini-ITX if companies are inventive.
But I'm curious... What happened to the nvidia-VIA love? :p And the joint netbook platform?
I while ago this was taken for granted:
:|
I'm *so* using this in my next article once I get some final kit :D
How about;
It's not technically splitting though when you're referring to electrons, but an Ion is "less" than an atom..
I've been bugging the PR all day to get the Pico box in so I can plug in a BD-ROM through eSATA and try out a Blu-ray box that's smaller than two 5.25" drives put together. I want to take pictures of it running on a HD projector :D
i would be more then interested in a mini itx mobo with a 330 atom and the nvidia chipset :D
I *do* have a mini-ITX 330 Atom, but it's not got the Nvidia chipset.
Review is next year :)