Read more.Shows Wolfenstein: Youngblood and The Bistro running on a MediaTek/Nvidia PC.
Read more.Shows Wolfenstein: Youngblood and The Bistro running on a MediaTek/Nvidia PC.
I did suspect this may be part of their gameplan, when the news initially broke.
That's not running on Windows for ARM, judging by the console window top left.
They seemed pretty up front about pushing their graphics IP as an ARM option. I think I said at the time I would be worried if I was on the ARM GPU team at this buyout, though it could be argued that the ARM graphics was always a cheapish option so possibly still no real overlap. But two GPU teams at Nvidia makes little sense long term.
With the right drivers in place, Nvidia could offer all the parts to make supercomputers. They have Mellanox networking and the big GPUs, and if they are lining up for an assault on server business then showing their GPU drivers just work even with games is a win for some nice high end supercomputer deals.
The Switch already runs 2016 Doom and one of the recent Wolfenstein titles,so I am not surprised that a more powerful GPU,on an ARM platform can run some RT effects.
Being as they are about to own ARM it's hardly big news that all the Nvidia gpu/compute stuff is going to work with what will be Nvidia cpu's.
I can see this being much more important for compute then gpu's (unless they get a console deal). Having some combined compute/ai/cpu packages for data centres/super computers so they no longer need x86 is an obvious way for Nvidia to go.
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