Radeon_3870_2

Graphics chipmakers are fond of making a case these days

that their graphics processing units (GPUs) are becoming as important or more

so than the central processing units (CPUs) of the PC microprocessor makers.

As bigger displays in high-definition dazzle consumers, most

of the horsepower that drives them comes from the GPU.

Fourth-quarter numbers for the graphics market will begin to

leak out after the market closes today. Ashok Kumar, CRT Capital analyst,

expects Silicon Valley’s Nvidia to pick up a point or two of market share, to

the detriment of its rival, Advanced Micro Devices (incorporating the Canadian

graphics chipmaker ATI).

He says 2007 was a memorable year for graphics, with the

release of richer interfaces in the Windows Vista and Apple Leopard operating

systems, a series of new graphics-intensive PC games, the new DX10 graphics

standard from Microsoft and a complete refresh of Nvidia and AMD’s line-ups.

Nvidia released its next-generation graphics chips and cards

ahead of AMD, gaining market share.

“AMD had their low point pretty much the middle of last

year,” says Dean McCarron of Mercury Research, who releases the fourth-quarter

figures today.

He says they recovered in the third quarter as new products

were released and describes the latest versions launched over the past week as

“process-shrinks essentially” that offer improved performance and have reduced

costs.

The ATI Radeon HD 3450, 3650 and 3870X2 boards are based on

chips with circuit widths of 55 billionths of a metre, compared to 80 billionths

in the previous generation. This allows a smaller die size, greater transistor

density and lower costs.

The 3450 and 3650, available this month, are low-power

sub-$150 boards, while the 3870X2, announced today, features two GPUs and, at

$450, is being priced around $150 below Nvidia’s competing card.

Multi-GPU boards are likely to become a trend, as are hybrid

graphics.

The graphics capabilities of low-cost PCs can easily be upgraded

by adding a new board. But, in the past, this has meant switching off the

integrated graphics chip already included on the motherboard.

With hybrid graphics, the integrated chip stays on and

is boosted by the addition of the board. AMD says it is introducing this

feature with its new boards, Nvidia says it already has the capability.

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