Monday, June 6th 2022

First Intel Arc A730M Powered Laptop Goes on Sale, in China

The first benchmark result of an Intel Arc A730M laptop made an appearance online and the mysterious laptop used to run 3DMark turned out to be from a Chinese company called Machenike. The laptop itself appears to go under the name of Dawn16 Discovery Edition and features a 16-inch display with a native resolution of 2560 x 1600, with a 165 Hz refresh rate. CPU wise, Machenike went with a Core i7-12700H, which is a 6+8 core CPU with 20 threads, where the performance cores top out at 4.7 GHz. The CPU has been paired with 16 GB of 4800 MHz DDR5 memory and the system also has a PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD of some kind, with a max read speed of 3500 MB/s, which isn't particularly impressive. Other features include Thunderbolt 4 support, WiFi 6E and Bluetooth 5.2, as well as an 80 Whr battery pack.

However, none of the above is particularly unique and what matters here is of course the Intel Arc A730M GPU. It has been paired with 12 GB of GDDR6 memory with a 192-bit interface, at 14 Gbps according to the specs. The memory bandwidth is said to be 336 GB/s. The company also provided a couple of performance metrics, with a 3DMark TimeSpy figure of 10002 points and a 3DMark Fire Strike figure of 23090 points. The TimeSpy score is a few points slower than the numbers posted earlier, but helps verify the earlier test result. Other interesting nuggets of information include support for 8k60 12-bit HDR video decoding for AV1, HEVC, AVC and VP9, as well as 8k 10-bit HDR encoding for said formats. Here a figure for the Puget Benchmark in what appears to be Photoshop (PS) is provided, where it scores 1188 points. The laptop is up for what appears to be pre-order, with a price tag of 7,499 RMB, or about US$1,130.
Sources: JD.com, via @momomo_us
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16 Comments on First Intel Arc A730M Powered Laptop Goes on Sale, in China

#2
Nanochip
Can someone put these scores in context? How does ARC compare to competing mobile graphics solutions? Is it in the ballpark of a mobile RTX 3070 ?
Posted on Reply
#3
TheLostSwede
News Editor
NanochipCan someone put these scores in context? How does ARC compare to competing mobile graphics solutions? Is it in the ballpark of a mobile RTX 3070 ?
See previous news post.
Posted on Reply
#4
Chrispy_
Can anyone translate the Chinese? I'm curious if it says anything about TDP or cooling in that image that has text pointing to some very beefy looking ventilation.

On the plus side, if this is ~3070(M) performance in a thin & light then the 384EU variant of Arc is looking competitive.

I really wish Intel would just frickin' launch it. The fact they've sampled OEM laptop vendors for long enough that a final retail product is in someone's hands is frustrating when it's the desktop GPU market that is most desperately in need of competition and where Intel will make the most profit.
Posted on Reply
#5
TheLostSwede
News Editor
Chrispy_Can anyone translate the Chinese? I'm curious if it says anything about TDP or cooling in that image that has text pointing to some very beefy looking ventilation.
Doesn't appear to be anything TDP related anywhere and I don't really need to be able to read chinese to figure that out.
Even the picture that shows more details about the cooling mention nothing that appears to be useful.

Chrispy_On the plus side, if this is ~3070(M) performance in a thin & light then the 384EU variant of Arc is looking competitive.
Thin and light? I think we have to agree to disagree about that, as it's 2.45 kg and 26.6 mm thick.
Chrispy_I really wish Intel would just frickin' launch it. The fact they've sampled OEM laptop vendors for long enough that a final retail product is in someone's hands is frustrating when it's the desktop GPU market that is most desperately in need of competition and where Intel will make the most profit.
PRC only. No Intel GPUs for capitalist countries.
Posted on Reply
#6
aQi
phanbueyIt's ALIVE!!!

Nice.
Intel's little frankenstein badboy....
Chrispy_Can anyone translate the Chinese? I'm curious if it says anything about TDP or cooling in that image that has text pointing to some very beefy looking ventilation.

On the plus side, if this is ~3070(M) performance in a thin & light then the 384EU variant of Arc is looking competitive.

I really wish Intel would just frickin' launch it. The fact they've sampled OEM laptop vendors for long enough that a final retail product is in someone's hands is frustrating when it's the desktop GPU market that is most desperately in need of competition and where Intel will make the most profit.
Idk how we missed it but perhaps this should get some more attention.

fudzilla.com/news/pc-hardware/54959-clevo-pairs-up-intel-alder-lake-h-with-arc-a770m-gpu
Posted on Reply
#7
phanbuey
TheLostSwedePRC only. No Intel GPUs for capitalist countries.
It's so for when it sucks, all those people are stuck behind a firewall and cant tweet about it to let the shareholders know.
Posted on Reply
#8
Assimilator
So PRC citizens get to be the beta testers for Raja, probably because he knows that if he tried to drop his half-baked turd on Westerners we'd tank Intel's share price.
Posted on Reply
#9
RedBear
phanbueyIt's so for when it sucks, all those people are stuck behind a firewall and cant tweet about it to let the shareholders know.
The first country that received the Arc GPUs was South Korea and while it doesn't exactly have a free internet, it still didn't stop people from talking about the (poor) performance of those laptops.
Posted on Reply
#10
lexluthermiester
Someone needs to get a hold of one of these and benchmark it.
RedBearThe first country that received the Arc GPUs was South Korea and while it doesn't exactly have a free internet, it still didn't stop people from talking about the (poor) performance of those laptops.
Official benchmarks not hearsay is what we need to see.
Posted on Reply
#11
TheLostSwede
News Editor
lexluthermiesterSomeone needs to get a hold of one of these and benchmark it.


Official benchmarks not hearsay is what we need to see.
You order one from JD.com then, link in the article, they ship internationally.
Posted on Reply
#12
lexluthermiester
TheLostSwedeYou order one from JD.com then, link in the article, they ship internationally.
I'd be happy to. If W1zzard wants to hire me as a reviewer and supply the laptop, I'd be happy to conduct testing & benchmarks and write up a first class review.
Posted on Reply
#13
Chrispy_
TheLostSwedeThin and light? I think we have to agree to disagree about that, as it's 2.45 kg and 26.6 mm thick.
Ah okay. I was going solely off the pictures since neither dimensions nor weights were posted. To me it looked thin - the thickest part of the body is about 2 USB-A ports thick, in the ballpark of 12-13mm so 26.6mm probably covers the screen lid and feet height:

2.45Kg sure isn't what I'd call light, 2Kg is closer to what I'd call portable for a 15, and that's the weight of convertibles with glass screens.
Posted on Reply
#14
aQi
lexluthermiesterI'd be happy to. If W1zzard wants to hire me as a reviewer and supply the laptop, I'd be happy to conduct testing & benchmarks and write up a first class review.
May the force be with you....
Posted on Reply
#15
TheLostSwede
News Editor
Chrispy_Ah okay. I was going solely off the pictures since neither dimensions nor weights were posted. To me it looked thin - the thickest part of the body is about 2 USB-A ports thick, in the ballpark of 12-13mm so 26.6mm probably covers the screen lid and feet height:

2.45Kg sure isn't what I'd call light, 2Kg is closer to what I'd call portable for a 15, and that's the weight of convertibles with glass screens.
Didn't bother posting too detailed specs, since it'll most likely never be sold outside of the PRC in this configuration and not at all by this brand.
Posted on Reply
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