techPowerUp! Forums

Go Back   techPowerUp! Forums > www.techpowerup.com > News

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old Sep 21, 2011, 01:37 AM   #1
qubit
Overclocked quantum bit
 
qubit's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Quantumville UK
Posts: 8,719 (4.31/day)
Thanks: 4,216
Thanked 3,334 Times in 1,970 Posts

System Specs

Super-High 4096 x 4096 Display From An IGP? The Upcoming Ivy Bridge Can Do It

The new Ivy Bridge processors, due out in about six months, have one apparently overlooked but important feature. No, it's not the greatly increased speed (about double or more of Sandy Bridge) or the advanced feature set. It's actually the super-high resolution capability: specifically 4096 x 4096 pixels. This astonishing capability is far better than any of the top-end discreet graphics cards such as the NVIDIA GTX 590 or AMD HD 6990 via a single monitor port. It's so high in fact, that there's almost no content at that resolution and no monitor that can handle it. This IGP can actually play multiple 4K video streams, too. NVIDIA unsurprisingly, is talking up the gaming possibilites at such a resolution. I'd like to see what kind of monster GPU could handle it. It will be interesting to see what uses this capability gets put to generally - and just how much the whole setup will cost.



Source: VR-ZONE
qubit is offline  
Reply With Quote
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to qubit For This Useful Post:
Old Sep 21, 2011, 01:41 AM   #2
HossHuge
1000 Posts
 
HossHuge's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Taiwan
Posts: 1,814 (1.00/day)
Thanks: 514
Thanked 457 Times in 303 Posts

System Specs

Any talk about anything over 1920x1080 can only be good.
__________________
But they are useless. They can only give you answers. ~Pablo Picasso, about computers
HossHuge is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 01:57 AM   #3
ensabrenoir
500 Posts
 
ensabrenoir's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 741 (0.64/day)
Thanks: 242
Thanked 92 Times in 74 Posts

System Specs

welcome 2 the matrix

Wow . Already unecessarily powerful...... now with even more POWER!!!!! man I love intel


Yeah yeah yeah nothing on earth now can effectively use this. Think of it as future proofing for the next decade. Or hologram ready yeah that's the ticket
__________________



1 Corinthians 6:20

Last edited by ensabrenoir; Sep 21, 2011 at 02:19 AM.
ensabrenoir is offline  
Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to ensabrenoir For This Useful Post:
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:02 AM   #4
TheLaughingMan
3500 Posts
 
TheLaughingMan's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Douglasville, GA USA
Posts: 3,734 (2.48/day)
Thanks: 1,371
Thanked 1,271 Times in 937 Posts
Send a message via MSN to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Yahoo to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Skype™ to TheLaughingMan

System Specs

I guess it was Intel's turn for a fluff post. Lets be realistic. Current dedicated GPU's are capable of outputting at a resolution far beyond their actual processing capability. All GPU's now list 2560 x 1600 as the maximum resolution for a single screen. There are maybe 2 that could actually do that at movie frame rate and only CRT monitors that could display that res.

On the flip, we have seen higher that 4k resolutions from AMD Eyefinity. Granted it was always more than one LCD and more than one GPU. In the end, this will just be some digits on a spec sheet that will be ignored and overlooked as they admit it will serve no purpose for lack of content. And if you do run a 4k res video, I am sure it will fall well below the 24 FPS movies use. Don't expect this on-die GPU to be beyond the sub-$100 performance section. So yes, I am going to hate a little here, but somebody has to do it.
__________________
My Heat

TheLaughingMan is online now  
Reply With Quote
The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to TheLaughingMan For This Useful Post:
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:07 AM   #5
Jstn7477
2000 Posts
 
Jstn7477's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Sarasota, Florida, USA
Posts: 3,248 (2.34/day)
Thanks: 397
Thanked 1,249 Times in 840 Posts

System Specs

Sure it can drive a monitor at 4096*4096, but what about games (which will likely be a slideshow). No GTX 590 or HD 6990 is going to be able to drive a 16 megapixel display as fluently as a 1920*1080 (~2 megapixel), so how is some Intel IGP sharing a DDR3 interface with the CPU going to do anything well at that resolution? Sounds like a USB video dongle displaying a Word document at that rate.
__________________
Intel Crunchers (34 threads): 4770K 4.3G (7t), 2x 3770K 4.3G (14t), 2600K 4G (7t), X3210 (3t), P-M 735A, P4 HT 3G
AMD Crunchers (12 cores):1100T 3.6G (3t), 1045T 3.4G (2t), X4 640 3.2G, X2 4200+, T64 ML-37
AMD Folders (6272 GCN cores): 2x 7950 1125/1475, 7970 1150/1650, 7770 1100/1200
NV Folders (2336 GF10x + 1344 GK104 cores):GTX 470 & 465 720/1715, 4x 460 768MB 825/2000, GTS 450, 660Ti 1228/6000

HEATWARE
Jstn7477 is offline  
Crunching for Team TPU More than 25k PPD
Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to Jstn7477 For This Useful Post:
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:23 AM   #6
newtekie1
Semi-Retired Folder
 
newtekie1's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Indiana
Posts: 17,903 (6.47/day)
Thanks: 785
Thanked 5,185 Times in 3,754 Posts

System Specs

4096 x 4096 in a 2D environment, big deal. By the time we see that even come close to mainstream, when people that are cheap enough to use the IGPs are looking to buy monitors at that resolution, Ivy Bridge will be as distant a memory as the Pentium III.
__________________

Rig1: System Specs.
Rig2: A8-5600K@4.4GHz / AsRock FM2A75 Pro4 / 8GB Corsair DDR3-1600 9-9-9-24 / HD7560D / Samsung DVD-Burner / 1.5TB WD Green + 3x3TB WD RED in RAID5
Rig3: Athlon X2 4200+ / M4A79 Deluxe / 4GB G.Skill Pi DDR2-800 4-4-4-12 / GT430 / Sony DVD-Burner / 500GB WD
Rig4: Phenom II x6 1605T @ 3.6GHz / Asus M5A99X Evo / 8GB PNY DDR3-1600 9-9-9 / GTX470 & GTX470 / Samsung DVD-Burner / 1.5TB Seagate
newtekie1 is online now  
More than 25k PPD
Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to newtekie1 For This Useful Post:
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:27 AM   #7
mcloughj
200 Posts
 
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Dublin, Ireland
Posts: 283 (0.10/day)
Thanks: 58
Thanked 56 Times in 32 Posts

System Specs

I'd like a 4KHD (guess it'll be called S-HD or something) monitor now please.
mcloughj is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:32 AM   #8
FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
 
FordGT90Concept's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: IA, USA
Posts: 10,648 (6.23/day)
Thanks: 1,785
Thanked 2,632 Times in 1,986 Posts

System Specs

The GPU isn't the problem, it's the cable. There's currently no means to deliver that high of a resolution to a display without using multiple cables. This is why NVIDIA and AMD haven't done it. It has me wondering about LightPeak or some other new technology they aren't talking about.

Eyefinity 6 can do a higher resolution (7680x3200, 24.5 MP) but over six discreet cables--Intel might simply be leaving out that little bit of information.
__________________
Golden Rule of Programming: Never assume.

try { SteamDownload(); }
catch (Steamception ex) { RageQuit(); }
FordGT90Concept is offline  
Crunching for Team TPU
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:40 AM   #9
m4gicfour
500 Posts
 
m4gicfour's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Swift Current, SK, Canada
Posts: 789 (0.43/day)
Thanks: 38
Thanked 294 Times in 225 Posts

System Specs

As everybody's said, the point is moot. I have a hard time believing that Intel's "IGP" can do any more than move windows around the desktop at that resolution without becoming a slideshow. They've come a long way since the Intel GMA of old, but not that far. Lets face it, photo editing is the only application where such ultra high-res could be used, without the dismal framerate rendering it completely useless. Even so, it would be irritating to use.
__________________
“Yes, but you are comparing Bethesda to EA. That's like comparing a fine dining experience at a gourmet restaurant to eating a turd out of a dumpster.” -Kreij

E-Mail me? Please use with courtesy.

Heatware
m4gicfour is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:41 AM   #10
TheLaughingMan
3500 Posts
 
TheLaughingMan's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Douglasville, GA USA
Posts: 3,734 (2.48/day)
Thanks: 1,371
Thanked 1,271 Times in 937 Posts
Send a message via MSN to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Yahoo to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Skype™ to TheLaughingMan

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by FordGT90Concept View Post
The GPU isn't the problem, it's the cable. There's currently no means to deliver that high of a resolution to a display without using multiple cables. This is why NVIDIA and AMD haven't done it. It has me wondering about LightPeak or some other new technology they aren't talking about.

Eyefinity 6 can do a higher resolution (7680x3200, 24.5 MP) but over six discreet cables--Intel might simply be leaving out that little bit of information.
I didn't even think about that. DisplayPort comes the closes but stops in the 3500 x 2600 ish range @ 30 bpp. Thunderbolt would be the only possible option.

P.S. It is no longer called LightPeak.
__________________
My Heat

TheLaughingMan is online now  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:44 AM   #11
m4gicfour
500 Posts
 
m4gicfour's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Swift Current, SK, Canada
Posts: 789 (0.43/day)
Thanks: 38
Thanked 294 Times in 225 Posts

System Specs

DL-DVI maxes out at 3840x2400. Didn't I read somewhere about QL-DVI? (dual DL-DVI cables in tandem)

I know HDMI has a "Professional" version of their spec taped out including a proprietary connector, which is supposed to address the disparity between HDMI and DVI as far as resolution capability, but last I read about it, no device was actually using the "pro" connector. Probably has sky-high liscencing fees too.
Quote:
Originally Posted by wikipedia
Type B
This connector (21.2 mm × 4.45 mm) has 29 pins and can carry double the video bandwidth of type A, for use with very high-resolution future displays such as WQUXGA (3,840×2,400).[48][49] Type B is electrically compatible with dual-link DVI-D, but has not yet been used in any products.[48][50]
I imagine if they spec'd for higher quality cabling and pushed out a new revision of the specification, new devices could probably operate on a combination of the 29-pin HDMI connector and higher clock rates. Although DVI and DisplayPort could do so just as easily.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Wikipedia - DVI
Dual link maximum data rate is limited only by the bandwidth limits of the copper the DVI cable is constructed of and by the DVI signal's source.
__________________
“Yes, but you are comparing Bethesda to EA. That's like comparing a fine dining experience at a gourmet restaurant to eating a turd out of a dumpster.” -Kreij

E-Mail me? Please use with courtesy.

Heatware

Last edited by m4gicfour; Sep 21, 2011 at 02:56 AM.
m4gicfour is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:55 AM   #12
TheLaughingMan
3500 Posts
 
TheLaughingMan's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Douglasville, GA USA
Posts: 3,734 (2.48/day)
Thanks: 1,371
Thanked 1,271 Times in 937 Posts
Send a message via MSN to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Yahoo to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Skype™ to TheLaughingMan

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by m4gicfour View Post
What does DL-DVI max out at? Didn't I read somewhere about QL-DVI? (dual DL-DVI cables in tandem)

I know HDMI has a "Professional" version of their spec taped out including a proprietary connector, which is supposed to address the disparity between HDMI and DVI as far as resolution capability, but last I read about it, no device was actually using the "pro" connector. Probably has sky-high licensing fees too.
DL-DVI maxes out at 3,840 × 2,400 @ 33 Hz and HDMI 1.4 maxes at 4096×2160 p24. As you seem to be unaware, all addition exploration into DVI was ended when HDMI became the standard. There were a number of projects in the work for DVI that did not and will not ever be completed. The final nail in the coffin was DisplayPort removing some of the proprietary issues with HDMI's license.

There is no disparity in resolution between DVI and HDMI. The only reason the specs are different is DVI is very old and still worked with 4:3 computer monitors in mind, while HDMI was done mainly for 16:9 with all display systems in mind.

And as far as I know, there never has been an HDMI Pro. Sounds like some marketing gimmick BS from Monster Cables to sell their $100 cables to simple folk who don't know better.
__________________
My Heat

TheLaughingMan is online now  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:57 AM   #13
FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
 
FordGT90Concept's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: IA, USA
Posts: 10,648 (6.23/day)
Thanks: 1,785
Thanked 2,632 Times in 1,986 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by TheLaughingMan View Post
I didn't even think about that. DisplayPort comes the closes but stops in the 3500 x 2600 ish range @ 30 bpp. Thunderbolt would be the only possible option.

P.S. It is no longer called LightPeak.
Thunderbolt's effective bandwidth is 10 Gb/s. DisplayPort is 17.28 Gb/s.

Thunderbolt is copper-based. LightPeak is optical/fiber based. Optical is ideal for sending imagery but it isn't simple nor cheap. Maybe Intel had a breakthrough.


Quote:
Originally Posted by m4gicfour View Post
DL-DVI maxes out at 3840x2400. Didn't I read somewhere about QL-DVI? (dual DL-DVI cables in tandem)
At an abnormal 33 Hz. 2560x1600 is the maximum dual-link DVI can handle at 60 Hz. 60 Hz is the standard for computers.

Quad-link DVI is an impossibility due to not having enough physical connections in the DVI standard. You might be thinking of 2 x dual-link DVI (literally two inputs on the monitor) which a lot of very high resolution (5+ MP) professional monitors use.
__________________
Golden Rule of Programming: Never assume.

try { SteamDownload(); }
catch (Steamception ex) { RageQuit(); }

Last edited by FordGT90Concept; Sep 21, 2011 at 03:04 AM.
FordGT90Concept is offline  
Crunching for Team TPU
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 02:59 AM   #14
TheLaughingMan
3500 Posts
 
TheLaughingMan's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Douglasville, GA USA
Posts: 3,734 (2.48/day)
Thanks: 1,371
Thanked 1,271 Times in 937 Posts
Send a message via MSN to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Yahoo to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Skype™ to TheLaughingMan

System Specs

And Wikipedia left out the fact that DVI is limited by the coding used to translate a signal to DVI standards. A set of encoding that will no longer be updated to improve it. Note HDMI has physically not changed. It has simply adhered to higher production standards and the encoding scheme has been updated to improve resolution and bandwidth.
__________________
My Heat

TheLaughingMan is online now  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 03:02 AM   #15
Jizzler
2000 Posts
 
Jizzler's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Geneva, FL, USA
Posts: 3,010 (1.41/day)
Thanks: 567
Thanked 606 Times in 487 Posts

System Specs

So what about multiple cables? It's how we've been doing 4K for years now.
Jizzler is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 03:08 AM   #16
m4gicfour
500 Posts
 
m4gicfour's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Swift Current, SK, Canada
Posts: 789 (0.43/day)
Thanks: 38
Thanked 294 Times in 225 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by TheLaughingMan View Post
DL-DVI maxes out at 3,840 × 2,400 @ 33 Hz and HDMI 1.4 maxes at 4096×2160 p24. As you seem to be unaware, all addition exploration into DVI was ended when HDMI became the standard. There were a number of projects in the work for DVI that did not and will not ever be completed. The final nail in the coffin was DisplayPort removing some of the proprietary issues with HDMI's license.

There is no disparity in resolution between DVI and HDMI. The only reason the specs are different is DVI is very old and still worked with 4:3 computer monitors in mind, while HDMI was done mainly for 16:9 with all display systems in mind.

And as far as I know, there never has been an HDMI Pro. Sounds like some marketing gimmick BS from Monster Cables to sell their $100 cables to simple folk who don't know better.
I'm perfectly aware DVI is no longer updated. Nice try at the troll though. "pro" was just my name for it, for lack of a better word. The connector is "HDMI B", and as wikipedia and every other source on the planet says, nothing uses it. Of course there is no HDMI Pro, and if there was a brand to sell a "HDMI Pro" cable, you're damn right it would be Monster trying to milk a "superior" gold coated diamond encrusted blessed by the saints of endor HDMI 1.4 "A" Cable. When I said pro, I just meant intended for professional use, in the same way 2xDL-DVI is.

Quote:
Originally Posted by FordGT90Concept View Post
At an abnormal 33 Hz. 2560x1600 is the maximum dual-link DVI can handle at 60 Hz. 60 Hz is the standard for computers.

Quad-link DVI is an impossibility due to not having enough physical connections in the DVI standard. You might be thinking of 2 x dual-link DVI (literally two inputs on the monitor) which a lot of very high resolution (5+ MP) professional monitors use.
Exactly. QL-DVI was one brand's marketing name for the 2xDL-DVI system. IF someone updated the DVI spec for a higher quality cable (which is what HDMI did, electrically speaking, then HDMI just fiddled with the TMDS protocol to add DRM and interleave audio on the video pins, with a higher clock rate) so it could handle a higher clock rate, actual QL-DVI-Effective bandwidth may be possible on a DVI connector.
__________________
“Yes, but you are comparing Bethesda to EA. That's like comparing a fine dining experience at a gourmet restaurant to eating a turd out of a dumpster.” -Kreij

E-Mail me? Please use with courtesy.

Heatware

Last edited by m4gicfour; Sep 21, 2011 at 03:21 AM.
m4gicfour is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 03:10 AM   #17
mastrdrver
2000 Posts
 
mastrdrver's Avatar
 
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 2,374 (1.51/day)
Thanks: 505
Thanked 501 Times in 401 Posts

System Specs

Sure Intel might be able to do 4k x 4k but at what kind of frame rate? No fun watching youtube videos on a $32k TV that shows videos as a slide show.

Also Intel =! drivers.

Until that problem is solved this is just another Intel "marketing" point.
__________________
AV-Test reports (updated Quarterly)
Fan sounds, airflow, and voltage/rpm recordings: Martinm210, Cooling Technique, atreviewnet
mastrdrver is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 03:11 AM   #18
Damn_Smooth
1000 Posts
 
Damn_Smooth's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2011
Location: A frozen turdberg.
Posts: 1,362 (1.78/day)
Thanks: 1,434
Thanked 502 Times in 329 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by mcloughj View Post
I'd like a 4KHD (guess it'll be called S-HD or something) monitor now please.
It is called Super Hi-Vision
Damn_Smooth is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 03:12 AM   #19
TheLaughingMan
3500 Posts
 
TheLaughingMan's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Douglasville, GA USA
Posts: 3,734 (2.48/day)
Thanks: 1,371
Thanked 1,271 Times in 937 Posts
Send a message via MSN to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Yahoo to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Skype™ to TheLaughingMan

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by FordGT90Concept View Post
Thunderbolt is copper-based. LightPeak is optical/fiber based. Optical is ideal for sending imagery but it isn't simple nor cheap. Maybe Intel had a breakthrough.
Thunderbolt is LightPeak. Several revisions were made during its development.

Originally conceived as an optical technology, Thunderbolt switched to electrical connections to reduce costs and to supply up to 10W of power to connected devices.[14]

In 2009, Intel officials said the company was "working on bundling the optical fibre with copper wire so Light Peak can be used to power devices plugged into the PC."[15] In 2010, Intel said the original intent was "to have one single connector technology" that would allow "electrical USB 3.0 […] and piggyback on USB 3.0 or 4.0 DC power."[16]

In January 2011, Intel's David Perlmutter told Computerworld that initial Thunderbolt implementations would be based on copper wires.[17] "The copper came out very good, surprisingly better than what we thought," he said.[18]

Intel and industry partners are still developing optical Thunderbolt hardware and cables.[19] The optical fiber cables are to run "tens of meters" but will not supply power, at least not initially.[20][21][22] They are to have two 62.5-micron-wide fibers to transport an infrared signal up to 100 metres (330 ft).[23] The conversion of electrical signal to optical will be embedded into the cable itself, allowing the current DisplayPort socket to be future compatible, but eventually Intel hopes for a purely optical transceiver assembly embedded in the PC.

As of now, Thunderbolt is a PCIe 4x and DisplayPort rolled into one. Bandwidth is 10 Gbits/s bi-directional. Switch that to single direction and you could currently get 20 Gbits/s, putting it just north of DisplayPorts max.

Reference: http://www.intel.com/technology/io/thunderbolt/ under the "what is Thunderbolt section"
__________________
My Heat

TheLaughingMan is online now  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 04:03 AM   #20
FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
 
FordGT90Concept's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: IA, USA
Posts: 10,648 (6.23/day)
Thanks: 1,785
Thanked 2,632 Times in 1,986 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by m4gicfour View Post
...actual QL-DVI-Effective bandwidth may be possible on a DVI connector.
It most likely is, but only over very short distances. Digital Display Working Group thought about cable lengths and signal quality when they introduced the DVI standard; the HDMI Founders did not. DVI has more than double the data wires than HDMI and the quality of said cables is much, much greater (better isolation, thicker, etc.). DVI, therefore, should be able to push at least double the bandwidth over the same distance but, as TheLaughingMan pointed out, DVI is no longer being expanded because of DisplayPort.


Quote:
Originally Posted by TheLaughingMan View Post
...but eventually Intel hopes for a purely optical transceiver assembly embedded in the PC.
That is LightPeak. Thunderbolt is the result of the future meeting reality. The goal that is LightPeak is still very much alive. I wouldn't be surprised at all if Thunderbolt always remains copper-based. DisplayPort was not intended for optical signals so they're going to have to put in place massive limitations (the optical/electrical conversions in the cables themselves) by not changing the connectors.


24-bit, 4096x4096 @ 60 Hz = 24.159191040 Gb/s
32-bit, 4096x4096 @ 60 Hz = 32.212254720 Gb/s
__________________
Golden Rule of Programming: Never assume.

try { SteamDownload(); }
catch (Steamception ex) { RageQuit(); }

Last edited by FordGT90Concept; Sep 21, 2011 at 04:16 AM.
FordGT90Concept is offline  
Crunching for Team TPU
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 04:16 AM   #21
NC37
1000 Posts
 
NC37's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: The armpit of California
Posts: 1,067 (0.63/day)
Thanks: 156
Thanked 238 Times in 142 Posts

System Specs

Do not be so impressed with this technological terror they've constructed. The ability to project to 4k resolutions is insignificant next to the power of a GPU.
NC37 is offline  
Reply With Quote
The Following User Says Thank You to NC37 For This Useful Post:
Old Sep 21, 2011, 04:26 AM   #22
TheLaughingMan
3500 Posts
 
TheLaughingMan's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2009
Location: Douglasville, GA USA
Posts: 3,734 (2.48/day)
Thanks: 1,371
Thanked 1,271 Times in 937 Posts
Send a message via MSN to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Yahoo to TheLaughingMan Send a message via Skype™ to TheLaughingMan

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by m4gicfour View Post
I'm perfectly aware DVI is no longer updated. Nice try at the troll though.
That was not a troll post. I was kinda serious.

And HDMI "B" is nothing special. It was just a revision designation. When they update 1.4a it will become 1.4b. If they change something major or there is a planned upgrade in bandwidth or performance, it will be 1.5.

Quote:
Originally Posted by FordGT90Concept View Post
24-bit, 4096x4096 @ 60 Hz = 24.159191040 Gb/s
32-bit, 4096x4096 @ 60 Hz = 32.212254720 Gb/s
I did say maybe. LightPeak is not some grand scheme or goal. It was just a code name. They may reuse the code name, but I really, really doubt they would.
__________________
My Heat


Last edited by TheLaughingMan; Sep 21, 2011 at 04:32 AM.
TheLaughingMan is online now  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 04:28 AM   #23
HTC
1000 Posts
 
HTC's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Portugal
Posts: 1,925 (1.01/day)
Thanks: 461
Thanked 282 Times in 230 Posts

System Specs

Quote:
Originally Posted by NC37 View Post
Do not be so impressed with this technological terror they've constructed. The ability to project to 4k resolutions is insignificant next to the power of a GPU.
Hehe: Star Wars reference
__________________
HTC - Hoje Tive Cá

I'm PORTUGUESE: apologies for any spelling mistakes!
HTC is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 06:06 AM   #24
purefun65
25 Posts
 
purefun65's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 33 (0.02/day)
Thanks: 4
Thanked 2 Times in 2 Posts

correct me if im wrong can this be used effectively in medical imaging?
purefun65 is offline  
Reply With Quote
Old Sep 21, 2011, 06:57 AM   #25
FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
 
FordGT90Concept's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: IA, USA
Posts: 10,648 (6.23/day)
Thanks: 1,785
Thanked 2,632 Times in 1,986 Posts

System Specs

No, everything that uses high resolution (read: CT and MRI scans) also needs substantial computational power. IGPs are simply not powerful enough to render dozens of slices in real-time without a serious GPU.
__________________
Golden Rule of Programming: Never assume.

try { SteamDownload(); }
catch (Steamception ex) { RageQuit(); }
FordGT90Concept is offline  
Crunching for Team TPU
Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Sandy Bridge-E 2011 Launch Put on Slide, Ivy Bridge in March-April 2012 btarunr News 20 Aug 9, 2011 05:12 PM
New 36-inch Monitor From EIZO Packs 4096 x 2160 Pixels Resolution btarunr News 67 Jun 28, 2011 05:50 AM
ASUS Radeon HD 6990 4096 MB W1zzard Reviews 114 Mar 30, 2011 10:08 AM
ASUS ARES 4096 MB - Dual HD 5870 W1zzard Reviews 47 Jul 15, 2010 10:01 AM
ASUS MARS Dual GeForce GTX 285 4096 MB W1zzard Reviews 42 Oct 21, 2009 02:52 AM


All times are GMT. The time now is 12:01 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.6
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
no new posts