Posts tagged with DDR3
Wolfenstein and Quakecon 2009
Posted by Ian McNaughton in 2:00 PM
The game that started the FPS phenomenon!
Back in the early nineties, there was a game that truly defined all video games that followed, do you remember? Well, for those readers who were not born yet, the game was called Wolfenstein 3D and its introduction was a defining moment. Some believe that Wolfenstein 3D defined the FPS as we know it. I would have to completely agree!
If you were a Doom player then you can thank Wolf 3D for blazing the trail for what was, is, and continues to be an amazing gaming franchise. Fast forward to August 2009 and transport yourself to Dallas, Texas and you can relive those original Wolf 3D experiences with AMD at Quakecon 2009.
id Software has teamed up with Raven Studios to develop a new game called “Wolfenstein”. In the new game you play the original character William B.J Blazkowicz who just happens to be a super metalled out member of the Office of Secret Actions (OSA). Come on, how cool would that business card be?
Ian McNaughton
AMD
Office of Secret Actions
Will need to print some of those up for Quakecon!
The new Wolfenstein looks fantastic, I was able to score an early copy to hone my skillz in preparation for this weekend’s festivities and the game is awesome so far…
AMD will be showcasing Wolfenstein on our booth as well as in #area64.
We will also be providing live updates via Twitter and vlogs via blogs.amd.com.
#Area64 will be exclusive access only, meaning, you can try to find it, but its hidden and being kept secret. AMD will be showcasing what we lovingly refer to as “The Future”, if you want to see the future, follow me as well as @AMD_Unprocessed , @Catalystmaker, @caseygotcher and @Tweetoe for ways to get invited.
Strap in and hold on, Quakecon 2009 is about to begin!
Cheers!
Ian “Cabrtosr” McNaughton
Ian McNaughton is senior manager of advanced marketing at AMD. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites are provided for convenience and unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such linked sites and no endorsement is implied.
Water Cooling – Are you nuts?
Posted by Ian McNaughton in 12:27 PM
Does the CoolIT Domino make the grade?
When the guys from CoolIT approached me for a quote for their Domino press release, my immediate reaction was, “Let’s get it in the lab and send me a review unit to test”…
Here at AMD we have a full scientific test lab for thermal devices. We all know that a properly built PC is a careful dance of core temp, ambient temp, chassis temp – all at idle, mid and full load. We like to test for real-world conditions, especially for those lazy Sundays when the air-conditioning breaks and your PC whizzes away stuffed in a cabinet under a desk collecting large deposits of dust. It’s our business to make sure our products run under the most grueling and sometimes strange environments.
Our lab guys were impressed with the Domino coolers they received. It was once thought that cost effective water cooling was impossible. Unfortunately I cannot share any of the details from those tests as they are all still very cloak and dagger (considered as internal trade secrets), but to say the least, I was impressed that they – our thermal fellows – were impressed. Now before I would ever give a “nod” to any product, I have to use and experience it first.
My hands on time with the Domino consisted of building out a new system based on AMD “Dragon” platform technology:
- Gigabyte GA-MA790FXT-UD5P Motherboard
- ATI RadeonTM HD 4890 discrete graphics
- Corsair DDR3 Ram 8G
- AMD PhenomTM II X4 955 3.2GHz processor
- 3x Western Digital HDD Totaling 1 Terabyte
- Corsair HX1000W PSU
- Coolermaster Cosmos 1000
- CoolIT Domino A.L.C
The setup was surprisingly easy; I fiddled with the brackets and little bolts until I got it right. It took just as long to install a Domino cooler as it did to fully install a PSU.
Once it was fully installed, I checked for leaks, cracks, breaks and/or other signs of water in my system prior to plugging it in and firing it up!
Water flowing through your PC is absolutely foreign to many and frankly most PC users. Why would anyone in their right mind want to have a water contraption in their PC, the answer is quite simple, superior cooling!
Water cooling has always been very expensive, labour intensive and a little dodgy at times. Horror stories of broken piping, reservoirs cracking and water leaking that swiftly destroys your entire PC have been whispered everywhere in the enthusiast community. A costly breakdown to say the least!
The old adage was “Cost effective water cooling is impossible”, well, until now.
The Domino made a tremendous difference in the hot air being expelled from the back of my chassis, it’s no longer “hot”, it’s simply a mild warm. This helps in a room full of PC’s and 2 giant monitors, trust me, personal comfort becomes paramount.
When I did a play test, I used CoD WaW and saw the Domino report a temp of 99degrees, 2079 rpm fan speed and 3123rpm pump speed on medium.
I switched it to the high setting and saw a decrease in temp, but an increase in ambient noise. The Domino reported a temp of 94degrees, 2824rpm fan speed and 3105prm pump speed.
The increase in noise levelled off to something more than bearable, but regardless, I game with headphones so the increase in ambient noise doesn’t bother me. I really liked the “beep” feature, it audibly lets you know when something has been changed or goes wrong.
The Domino does not seem to be intended for a DIY’er who makes lots of changes to her/his PC on a regular basis. It seems better suited for the gamer or enthusiast who builds and uses their PC in that config for awhile. How often do you really upgrade your mobo and CPU anyway, every 6months? 9months? 12months?
As I am not a reviewer, nor do I claim to be, I almost completely rely on the reviewer community to recommend or not recommend a product, here is what they have to say:
Maximum PC gave it a 9/10 in its June issue.
Almost unanimously reviewed positively and recommended.
If you are a gamer looking to add “H2O” to your system, the Cool-IT Domino is a good option.
Cheers!
Ian “Cabrtosr” McNaughton
Ian McNaughton is senior manager of advanced marketing at AMD. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites are provided for convenience and unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such linked sites and no endorsement is implied.
The Inside Scoop on Corsair’s Andy Paul and DDR3
Posted by Ian McNaughton in 11:28 AM
Memory Guru and owner/founder of Corsair Andy Paul on the PC Industry
The PC industry has many cool companies, lots of innovations and a ton of great people! One such company is Corsair, which I have worked with for many years. At their helm a very interesting, some say eccentric and down to earth personality – the one, the only, Andy Paul.

Andy Paul - CEO Corsair
Having known Andy for years, I thought it appropriate to ask him the hard memory questions that most enthusiasts never get the opportunity to ask. Andy freely shared his wisdom, opinions, thoughts, intuitions and even a few wild predictions.
5 random Andy Paul facts:
1. When I started my career, Intel was a leader in the memory world, microprocessors were 4 bit and the volume applications were washing machines
2. I am from England; I have two English cars and two English dogs
3. I have a Degree in Physics from City University in London
4. My wife, Lisa, is American and is a writer and a blogger
5. I own a small vineyard and have been making wine for a few years

Andy in his Vineyard
Ian – Andy, first thanks for taking the time to do this for us and for the community, don’t worry I will be gentle. Let’s kick this off by telling us the story of Corsair? How did it begin and where are you guys now?
Andy – Well Ian, this is probably before your time, but back in the early nineties, CPUs did not have onboard L2 Cache. So we started Corsair as a specialist supplier of L2 Cache modules to large OEMs. That was a great business for a while – until cache got moved onto the processor. Fortunately for us, at the same time, DRAM was transitioning from EDO to SDRAM, and we decided to jump into the DRAM market. We were one of the few suppliers in existence that understood that SDRAM required high speed circuit design and carefully controlled BOMs in order to perform well. We quickly developed a reputation for performance and stability, and we decided to build a company based on that reputation. Now Corsair is one of the most recognized brands out there for computer components, particularly among those who love performance hardware. We now sell not only memory, but power supplies and flash drives as well.
Ian – Corsair was born from humble beginnings; and speaking of memory, let’s dive into some questions from the community that I queried via Twitter and game.amd.com forums. How do you think the transition from DDR2 to DDR3 memory is going?
Andy – It’s going quite well; this has been an easy transition for the customer. DDR3 has entered the market with no real compatibility problems or performance glitches. And, the cost of DDR3 has continued to trend downwards as expected. 4GB or even 6GB of DDR3 is now easily within the component budget for a typical system build. And we are hitting speeds of 2000 MHZ.
Recently the core i7 CPU has mainly been driving the volume of DDR3 in the enthusiast market but we expect the socket AM3 AMD Phenom™ II CPU with DDR3 to help the transition
Ian – Well, cost is always a factor in the PC industry. You mentioned that DDR3 cost is trending downward, which is great, what are the benefits and why should a gamer make the investment?
Andy – Well, as I mentioned before, cost on DDR3 really is not an issue so much any more. In fact, you can buy 6GB of premium, overclocked Corsair memory for less than $100. It’s the bargain of the century! For high performance, for ultimate bandwidth, and for compatibility with the future, you’ve got to go with DDR3.
However, DDR2 still meets the needs of most user applications. At the moment the purchase choice isn’t really made at the RAM purchase level but at the system level. If it’s a 65nm AMD Phenom processor or Core 2 Duo then it’s going to be configured with DDR2 motherboards and memory. If a user goes with Core i7 or a new AMD Phenom II processor with DDR3, then he would pick a DDR3 motherboard and DDR3 memory. The point is when you add up the cost of a high performance DDR3 system compared to a volume DDR2 solution, only a small premium will be from the memory. So that’s not what drives the decision, it’s more about the overall system features.
Ian – I understand the bandwidth benefit but what about latency? Gamers demand lower latency and DDR2 delivers that. When will DDR3 catch up and when will it surpass DDR2 in terms of latency?
Andy – DDR3 has already passed DDR2 in terms of latency. Remember, latency is notated in clock cycles, but actually represents elapsed time. So, 1600MHz CAS-8 is actually LOWER latency (and thus, faster) than 800MHz CAS-5. Corsair’s fastest available part is 2000MHz CAS-7, which means that the latency is 3.5 nanoseconds. This is the same latency as 800MHz CAS-2.8 which of course does not exist! So, we have already seen this crossover.
Ian – As the trend towards more memory increases (I have 8G in my home system), is DDR3 better suited for denser memory? i.e. 2G or 4G memory sticks. How do you see the memory piece of the PC puzzle working out?
Andy – DDR3 is not intrinsically higher density than DDR2. However, DDR3 is better suited for denser memory in that it is now the focus of development technology for memory. So, as fabs come up with new process geometries and new device densities, the development focus will be on DDR3, and DDR3 will be the first technology to market.
From a density standpoint, we see the sweet spot for memory being at least 6GB for three channel configurations, and at least 4GB for dual channel configurations. By the end of the year, I think many or most dual channel builds will transition to 8GB. Memory cost will continue to trend downwards, Windows 7 will be out there and applications programmers will produce applications and games that are designed to take advantage of 64-bit memory addressing. Even now many of our customers are populating machines with 12G.
Ian - Are there any memory trends on the horizon you think would have a cool geek factor?
Andy – Well, Corsair definitely has lots of products here and on the horizon which have serious geek appeal. And since we are the leaders here and others tend to copy what we do, I suppose the trends will follow! Just one example of a cool enthusiast product we offer is a cooling system for memory which actually takes the memory BELOW ambient temperature. The technology is TEC based, but employs humidity and temperature sensors to keep the modules just ABOVE the dew point to avoid condensation. Also, of course, our Dominator GT modules with racing red heat sinks and the world’s fastest performance are also very appealing to “geeks!”
Ian - With PC ASP’s driving down to historical lows and in an extremely challenging economy, where do you see the PC industry going?
Andy – Well, Ian, being at AMD I suspect you have a better view of that than I do. My standpoint is heavily tilted towards the home system builder community. We still see a lot of activity but, combined as you might expect with some degree of fluctuation based on the economic uncertainty, as you might expect. I would think that there will be a lot of fallout this year, especially with companies that lack premium features in their products, or companies without strong brands.
For component areas with a lot of suppliers, like memory, graphics cards, etc., I would expect to see the most casualties. But the companies that continue to innovate and offer their customers features with good value will continue to do well. What I do see is that with lower prices, most families now have multiple PCs; this doesn’t have to be a major family purchase anymore. In fact the last cell phone I bought cost me more than the general purpose PC I just built, and I just put a small format 12V PC in my boat. So I think there are plenty of opportunities for the market to continue to expand.
Of course it’s high graphics content games that really drive the performance market, and until those achieve TV level reality, I don’t think the market will slow down in terms of technological advancement.
Ian – Make a wild prediction for enthusiasts and gamers?
Andy – I would expect that in 3 years from now, Corsair will be as well known for the cases and power supplies we make as for high performance memory. Actually that’s not that wild is it? How about Intel merging with Nvidia?
Ian – Finally, is the story true about the Corsair business plan being figured out on a boat?
Andy – Yes, that is true. I used to spend almost every weekend sailing and racing boats. When a few of us got talking about starting a new company it seemed a good place to have the discussion, over a few beers I think.
That’s how the pirate name, Corsair, came into being.

Ian – Andy, thank you for your time; how can gamers and enthusiasts get more info on Corsair?
Andy – Well, at www.corsair.com, of course… as well on enthusiast forums, review sites, and blogs (like this one!), and at most computer component retailers worldwide…
Cheers!
Ian “Cabrtosr” McNaughton
Andy Paul is CEO and President of Corsair Memory. His opinions are his own and may not represent those of AMD.
Ian McNaughton is senior manager of advanced marketing at AMD. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites are provided for convenience and unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such linked sites and no endorsement is implied.
An Enthusiasts Dream Machine
Posted by Ian McNaughton in 3:29 PM
Simply blissful gaming!
Twist my arm, unreleased GPU meets, unreleased CPU meets unreleased Microsoft OS! When I was asked to build out a totally “unreleased product” PC and experience/blog on the tremendous gaming capabilities of such a system, I was all over it!
First things first, collect all the necessary components; as you can imagine this is a very easy task at AMD.
Components – CHECK
Chassis – Antec Skeleton (as this is easy to do quick uninstalls and reinstalls)
Motherboard – Gigabyte MA790FXT-UD5P (AM3)
Memory – 8G Corsair XMS3 DHX DDR3 1333
CPU – Unreleased AMD Phenom™ II Quad Core (3.2Ghz)
GPU – ATI Radeon™ HD 4890 OC (unreleased at the time, available today)
OS – A super secret version of Windows 7
CPU is an AMD Phenom II X4 quad core running at a stock frequency of 3.2Ghz, this CPU is scheduled to be available sometime in Q2.
The GPU is a third generation DirectX10.1 graphics card that is powered by the most powerful gaming GPU under $2601.. Availability of this GPU is April 2nd worldwide (today) and I was excited to test it early!
Some of the specs to the GPU are:
Compute Power – 1.36 TFLOPS
Core Clock Speed – 900 Mhz
Memory – GDDR5
Frame Buffer – 1G
Memory Bandwidth – 124.8 GB/s
Transistors – 959 million
Stream Processors – 800
On to the gaming experience.

Home office and test area – Yes, that is Tweetdeck open, yes that is an HP dv2 on the left and yes that is an Optimun Prime helmet beside my Master Chief helmet! Me=Geek
Just for clarity, I installed a really mature version of Windows 7 as the OS to go with the ATI Catalyst™ 9.3 software driver that we just released. This excluded me from using AMD Overdrive™ for overclocking2 or Fusion Gaming Utility3 as I did not have time to fully test these apps on Win7 (rest assured we’ll get to those in other blogs). Not to mention, I really wanted to give you a sense of the coolest gaming PC build possible!!!
If you have read any of my previous posts, you will quickly come to realize that I love Call of Duty 4: World at War, Left 4 Dead and F.E.A.R.2. These were my games of choice. As you can clearly see above, I hooked them up to one of my 30” DELL monitors and cranked all the game settings to the max. It was simply beautiful, truly cinematic HD gaming.
L4D, killing zombies on a 22” screen is boring, killing zombies while rendering with an HD4890 on a 30” screen was scary!! I have never been so stressed out while gaming (minus my first time playing DOOM).
Did I mention the system was almost silent, it was cool and quiet!
F.E.A.R. 2, can’t say I’m tired of playing the first few levels of this game, especially on such a massive screen with so much horsepower!Between the CPU and GPU, F.E.A.R 2 purred along at 2560×1600 without a hitch, flicker or anomaly! It was the way the game was meant to be played! (no pun intended here)
Did I mention the system was almost silent, it was cool and quiet!
The experience of CoD4 WaW was awe-inspiring! Nothing like running into a fox hole – gun a’blazin’ (or in this case, flame thrower a’flamin’) without the distraction of load times or annoying interruptions from hitches and flickers!
Did I mention the system was almost silent, it was cool and quiet!
If you are a hard core gamer looking for the best GPU value in the market – and when I say value I do not mean cheap or thrifty, I mean hardnosed best product for the money – the ATI Radeon HD 4890 needs to be a consideration! Market leading performance, exceptional price AND actual availability on launch day! No PR gimmicks here folks, no paper launches, no “ball and cup” games, just innovative product, with industry leading features built by gamers for gamers!
Don’t take my word for it; here are some very reputable 3rd party review sites to verify my experience!
“Editor’s choice Enthusiast Gold Award”
Mark Warner, Brent Justice, HardOCP
“Bon” Award (performance 4/5, features 4/5)
“It is hardly known if the GTX 275 will be available in volume or at the price promised”
Clubic.com (France)
“It is not a completely new design, but the Radeon HD 4890 is an exciting product nonetheless. To put it simply, the Radeon HD 4890 is the fastest, single-GPU powered graphics card AMD has ever produced. And its competitive pricing and overclocking headroom should further its appeal amongst enthusiasts.”
“HotHardware Recommended Award”
Marco Chiappetta, HotHardware.com
Now, I need to get back to gaming on this beautiful piece of engineering…until next blog!
(BTW: I respond to most all comments personally, catch me here or on Twitter)
Cheers!
Ian “Cabrtosr” McNaughton
1 Internal calculations show that the ATI Radeon HD 4890 delivers 1.36 TFLOPs of raw compute power. Third-party testing shows that the fastest competing GPU, the GeForce GTX 280 graphics processor, delivers 1.06 TFLOPs of raw compute power. http://www.gpureview.com/GeForce-GTX-285-card-605.html.
2 AMD product warranty does not cover damage caused by performance tuning, even when enabled using AMD software.
3 THIS UTILITY MAY DISABLE SECURITY / ANTIVIRUS SOFTWARE, OR ADVERSELY AFFECT YOUR SYSTEM. REVIEW ACCOMPANYING DOCUMENTATION CAREFULLY BEFORE INSTALLING
Ian McNaughton is senior manager of advanced marketing at AMD. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites are provided for convenience and unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such linked sites and no endorsement is implied.
The PC Enthusiast’s $145 “Tri-fecta”…
Posted by Ian McNaughton in 4:34 AM
Test driving the new AM3-compatible AMD Phenom™ II Triple-core Processor One of the perks of my job is I get to use PC hardware long before it’s ever launched (yes I know, some might be jealous of such a perk). With the launch of our AM3 parts, it was no exception. One of our faithful PR spinners dropped off a triplecore, specifically the AMD Phenom™ II X3 720 Black Edition (2.8GHz) to my desk, the idea was that I would build a system from scratch and then write a blog on the experience. Being a team player and loving the idea of a whole day in thermal grease up to my elbows, I had to accept the task…here we go: The system I chose to build was:
- AMD Phenom™ II X3 720 Black Edition (2.8GHz)
- Gigabyte GA-MA790GP-DS4H (AMD 790GX-based mobo)
- ATI Radeon™ HD 4870 X2 (single card without ATI CrossFireX™ technology enabled)
- 4G Corsair Memory DDR2
- 150G WD HDD
- Windows Vista Ultimate 32bit
After the install and boot up was complete, I did what ALL gamers should do (on a monthly basis) and updated my ATI CatalystTM GPU software drivers… The idea of triple core was a novel approach for CPUs, normally, or better, historically we (the industry) went from 1…2…4… etc, always in multiples of 2x. AMD broke this trend as we had the world’s first native quad-core processor for desktop PCs which allowed us to offer the market a triple-core processor. The significance of this is that now consumers had more choice, OEMs and the channel had more differentiation and AMD offered a product that its competitor could not replicate. But I digress, moving on to gameplay. The FarCry 2 play test:
I loaded a fresh copy of FarCy 2 and proceeded to crank the settings: 2560×1600, AA 4x, DirectX10 (would have elected DirectX10.1 if available) all other settings were on High or Ultra High. The load time was quick; the game play was smooth, no hitches, no visible issues, a solid great experience. The GPU did not have ATI CrossfireXTM technology enabled as I wanted to play the game with the equivalent of a performance mainstream card such as the ATI Radeon HD 4870. The picture above does not do the experience justice but it looked beautiful, 30 inches of monitor in all its splendor powered by a $145 CPU, unbelievable. But, it’s not a magic trick; I played a few more games to make sure this experience was not an anomaly.
The AMD Phenom II X3 720 Black Edition was a champ, the game experiences were awesome, and why is that you ask? The answer is quite simple, the system I built was a balanced system, I invested more in graphics, which allowed me to have the ultimate gaming experience while not having to invest in a $1000 CPU. Oh, did I mention that these processors are DDR3 AND DDR2 capable, meaning you can use them in your existing AM2+ socket motherboard as an upgrade OR in our new AM3 DDR3 socket motherboards. One of the things I give AMD huge credit for is their continued support of past generation infrastructure, this means cheaper alternatives for consumers and gives YOU the gamer the choice when you want to upgrade.
The old school belief was that to get the best PC experience, one must invest as much as possible in the CPU; this is now a myth, tales of long ago, fallacy, make believe! Don’t believe the Blue hype in the market, you can have a brilliant multi-core gaming experience with overclockability for less than $145. This little triple-core processor is proof of that!1 The GPU and the chipset have become vital decisions when building a PC, the old adage of “a chain is only as strong as its weakest link” holds true in PCs today. I was thoroughly impressed with this product, especially when you take into account its price point, its headroom and the market leading chipsets it gets slotted into. Harness a system like this with the AMD Fusion for Gaming utility2 and the AMD OverDrive software and you have the makings of a fantastic mainstream gaming system. Check out these 3rd party reviews to see for yourself: Bjorn 3D: “Phenom 2 X4 940 BE, X4 810 & X3 720 BE
”
- AWARD: “Seal of Approval”
HardOCP: “Phenom II Gets Affordable with DDR3 & AM3 ”
- AWARD: “Editors Choice Gold Award”
Firing Squad: AMD’s AM3 CPUs: Phenom II X4 810 and Phenom II X3 720 Black Edition Hot Hardware: AMD Phenom II X4 810 and X3 720 BE Processors Also check out this video and these photos.
1AMD warranty does not cover damage caused by overclocking, even when using AMD OverDrive™ software.
2 THIS UTILITY MAY DISABLE SECURITY / ANTIVIRUS SOFTWARE, OR ADVERSELY AFFECT YOUR SYSTEM. REVIEW ACCOMPANYING DOCUMENTATION CAREFULLY BEFORE INSTALLING Cheers!
Ian “Cabrtosr” McNaughton
Ian McNaughton is senior manager of advanced marketing at AMD. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites are provided for convenience and unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such linked sites and no endorsement is implied.
ATI XGP from AMD – Desktop-class Graphics for Notebook Gamers
Posted by Ian McNaughton in 1:44 PM
“Plug ‘n’ Pulverize” gaming graphics upgrade for notebook PCs
For millions of notebook PC users, it’s been nothing more than a frustrated wish. A portable performance possibility never realized. A mobile multi-monitor dream unfulfilled. An unreachable itch that laptop-toting PC gamers could never scratch -until now.
Thanks to AMD, notebook buyers will finally get what they have wanted for so long: “Plug ‘n’ Pulverize” graphics performance that transforms a thin-and-light laptop into a gaming powerhouse. AMD’s new ATI XGP™ technology is a PCIe 2.0-compatible external graphics platform that adds desktop-class graphics performance and multi-monitor muscle to compatible notebook PCs. The idea is to deliver both long battery life and a great gaming experience -two features long considered mutually exclusive – making XGP a potential breakthrough innovation that gives notebook gamers the best of both worlds.
Supercharge gaming for CRYSIS-worthy frame rates with multi-GPU ATI CrossFireX™ technology, mating the ATI XGP’s ATI Radeon™ HD 3870 GPU with the notebook PC’s internal ATI Radeon HD 3000-series graphics card. Enjoy ultra high quality HD graphics for demanding multimedia and video editing tasks, HD video and Blu-ray decoding and playback, integrated HD audio output over HDMI, and more.1

Rabah and Ron (the AMD brains behind the scenes)
ATI XGP™ technology features an ATI Radeon HD 3870 GPU with 512 MB DDR3 video memory inside a small portable enclosure with standalone power and cooling. It connects to a compatible AMD-based notebook PC with a special eight-lane PCI Express 2.0 external cable, enabling the ATI XGP to simultaneously drive up to three external high-resolution displays with HDMI and DVI connections. A couple of powered USB 2.0 ports also enable easy external mouse and keyboard docking.
This kind of solution has been the long-sought holy grail of every notebook user who suffered buyer’s remorse after discovering the limitations of their latest lightweight wonder. Our lead ATI XGP technology OEM partner is Fujitsu Siemens Computers and together we have been able to bring to market their FSC Amilo Graphics Booster, one of the “coolest” external consumer devices ever offered in the gaming/consumer electronics space. My exalted “insider” status enabled me to actually kick the tires and take it for a spin!

The FSC Graphics Booster: a half-kilogram of full desktop-class performance
We hooked-up a FSC Graphics Booster to a ATI XGP-ready notebook and big-screen HDTV at our UK AMD Live! lab. Addled gamers that we are, we loaded fresh installs of CRYSIS and FRAPS to put the FSC Graphics Booster to the ultimate FPS test.

The plant is fake – but the FPS are real
Our first impression? The FSC Graphics Booster is a great solution to play today’s most demanding PC games at mainstream resolutions on a thin-and-light laptop, yet avoiding the bulk, weight, heat, and battery power consumption of built-in single or dual discrete notebook graphics.

From left: playing GRID, watching HD video, tweaking Twitter, digging DIGG
Next: a multi-monitor experiment to try something other notebook users can only wish they could. Even with dual-core CPUs and multitasking operating systems, today’s notebook PCs are typically productivity-hobbled by the lack of true support for multiple high-resolution displays. The FSC Graphics Booster with AMD’s XGP technology changes all of that, simultaneously driving three external monitors along with the notebook’s screen.

Quad-displays = sweaty-palmed excitement
The FSC Graphics Booster with ATI XGP™ technology offers an unbeatable combination of desktop-class graphics power, ATI CrossFireX technology-enabled, and multi-display support. Thin-and-light notebook users can now have it all – mobile computing when you need it, multi-monitor productivity when you want it, and ATI CrossFireX graphics performance when your in-game survival depends on it. Check out some early reviews on We Got Served and here Notebookcheck.com
Watch this space for more notebook PC gaming, because I’m planning to take the awesome Alienware M17 for the ultimate test drive!
Cheers!
Ian “Cabrtosr” McNaughton
1. HD monitor required. Additionally, a Blu-ray drive is required for Blu-ray playback.
Ian McNaughton is senior manager of product and platform marketing EMEA at AMD. His postings are his own opinions and may not represent AMD’s positions, strategies or opinions. Links to third party sites are provided for convenience and unless explicitly stated, AMD is not responsible for the contents of such linked sites and no endorsement is implied.



(14 votes, average: 3.93 out of 5)










