Intel has pulled ATI's chipset license - this doesn't come as much of a surprise, given the earlier news.
There is a lot of news surrounding ATI at the moment, especially with the
AMD buy out confirmed earlier today.
Intel has
pulled ATI's chipset license, meaning that there will be no more ATI (or rather, AMD) chipsets for Intel processors after the end of the year.
There will still be time for one more though, namely the
upcoming RD600 chipset, which doesn't look like it will be cancelled, despite the earlier news. However, it is unclear whether the RD600 project will see the light of day though.
Intel has pushed the fact that its 975X chipset supports CrossFire quite heavily, especially with the Core 2 Duo launch. I think it is a fairly safe bet to say that Intel will contine to support CrossFire on its high end chipsets for the foreseeable future.
After all, Intel is keen to sell its own products, especially now it has the fastest chip on the market. Also, I don't believe that AMD would choose to lock CrossFire out on Intel's chipsets either, because it just wouldn't make financial sense - AMD/ATI will still profit from the video cards sold for use with Intel products.
Intel has already dropped support for CrossFire on its
965-series chipsets and it is unclear whether Intel will continue to design chipsets that support multi-GPU technologies. The company has been hinting at moving GPU tasks back onto the CPU for a few months now.
We'll bring you more as soon as we get it...
Discuss in the forums
I dont look forward to this merger, the decreasing lack of compition in the Tech market is already bad for us consumers. We have 2 chip makers, 2 video card makers, this merger does not bode well for competitive pricing. or inovation.
Unless AMD's next gen processors blow Conroe out of the water (up to this point, it seems unlikely that this will happen) we're looking at the colapse of AMD/ATI in the next 1-2 years..
I'm not at all worried about AMD / ATi's long term viability. If the market was power-user centric that might be an issue, but it's not. The enthuiest market is pretty small and is more of a marketing niche for all the companies involved. AMD sells far more Semprons than it does FX series chips, and in the lower end performance is less important then price and reliability.
Remember "Intel inside, don't divide"? Lets hope they got it right this time
P.S. You guys have a great site and good discussion groups here in the forums.. still new here, but I'm a forum Moderator at Cluboverclocker.com and occasionaly write articles for them..
[15:53] <TMM> not if ATI release drivers to block it
[15:53] <TMM> pwned!
;)
That said ATI will have to let it go through to SOME chipsets to maintain the intel market. But which ones? Since ATI have no contracts, they could just make it available on all of them, so people would buy the cheap intel chipsets and then intel = mad :P
Howd you figure that? The issue is, if gfx and CPU manufacturer's "lock" their cards/drivers/chipets to a certain GFX card or CPU then you're going to loose business. It makes business sense to keep consumers options open somewhat and offer them choice. I'd HATE to have to run the GFX card I'm "told" to based on which CPU I chose to run. Highly doubt ATI/AMD will "force" AMD users to run ATI graphics cards. It'd be suicide if they did!
1333 FSB btw, is around the max Intel are able to run reliably at the moment, and even these FSB's are pushing things a little. Have some doubts they'll be able to push these much further in the near future. AMD has the better arcitecture in that respect. ATI aren't "far behind" in GPU term's either.. Their 7900 series is basically a tweaked and overclocked 6800. ATI on the other hand totally changed their GPU design with the X1xxx series. It's MUCH more flexible than the Nvidia design. Will be interesting to see how the DX10 cards pan out too, Nvidia going it seems for the hybrid approach and ATI moving the way of full unified shaders.. IF the roumers from ATI are true, and this IS their fastest DX9 card then Nvidia could be in some trouble... The initial thoughts re unified shading was that DX9 performance would take a hit as the card is "optimisted" for DX10...
Conroe isn't as far ahead of AMD as many were expecting IMHO. From the early results it looked like conroe would be MILES ahead. Thats not really the case. AMD arent out of the game yet, the low prices on the AM2 and 939 CPU's haul them back into the market. People looking for cheap machines might well go the AMD route over Conroe. I'd certainly recommend 939/AM2 machines in the budget segment over Conroe/Intel at the moment due to cost and the availability of decent motherboards at low cost.
This is more of a personal grudge against ATI.. I'm a 3D/CAD person.. have been for 18 years now.. I teach AutoCAD, 3DS Max, Inventor and Revit and aparently, since Alias is now owned by Autodesk, I'm going to start having to learn how to teach that as well.. I never bought into the Quadro's due to the fact that the same level workstation card from Nvidia was always almost double the ATI equivilant.. Now the drawback.. I started out with an early $900 FireGL card and ATI stopped driver support for it less than a year after I made the purchase.. by the time the next version of the Autodesk software had been released, I was in need of another high-end video card again.. So I got the ATI FireGL 8800 128MB card (this is back in very early 2002).. by the end of the year, the FireGL X1/X2 cards had been released and I was out of another $800 due to their policy of only supporting a workstation card until it's out of production.. Thier newer cards all have drivers that are backwards compatible now, but it just left a very bad taste in my mouth that's going to be very difficult to get out..
And getting a little worried about the new AMD/ATI super power...