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Datum registracije: Feb 2014
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U slučaju da je sve vezano uz ARC GPU bilo odrađeno kak spada i da nemaju ama baš nikakvih problema, opet su zakasnili dvije godine u odnosu na konkurenciju.
Žalosno kak god se okrene, jer da bi ARC GPU modeli imali utjecaj na cijene, trebali su biti na tržištu još 2020. i to bi onda bila sasvim druga priča.
Ovo skrivanje i pokazivanje svega, samo ne konkretnih performansi uz ionak mutne likove poput Raje i Ryana je samo dodatna pizdarija.
EDIT:
Citiraj:
Intel takes iGPU driver shortcut for ARC gaming GPUs, crashes unto ditch
Citiraj:
Early this year, Intel disclosed plans to ship four million discrete ARC Alchemist gaming GPUs in 2022, but many observers considered the target rather conservative. Now, following multiple launch delays and limited availability, Intel said this week that it would miss its discrete GPU shipments this year. Surprisingly, the company blames its drivers for the integrated graphics built into its CPUs for the delays and lower-than-expected sales of its discrete GPU lineup. Intel really needed all-new drivers written from scratch to roll out its discrete gaming GPUs for desktops and laptops. However, its drivers for discrete gaming GPUs were not on par with those offered by AMD and nVidia because it chose to use the same graphics drivers as it used for the low-powered integrated graphics present in its CPUs.
"Our software release on our discrete graphics was clearly underperforming," said Gelsinger. "We thought that we would be able to leverage the integrated graphics software stack, and it was wholly inadequate for the performance levels, gaming compatibility, etc. that we needed. So we are not hitting our four million unit goal in the discrete graphics space, even as we are now catching up and getting better software releases." It's a bit mind boggling that Intel even thought its integrated graphics drivers would be appropriate for desktop GPUs that potentially deliver up to 20X more compute performance than even its best integrated GPUs.
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Izvor: Tom's Hardware
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Citiraj:
Intel's Vice President of Accelerated Computing Systems and Graphics (AXG), Raja Koduri, went on Twitter to state that Intel Graphics is very much committed to their roadmap and they are ramping Alchemist (Intel Arc A-Series) and will continue to improve the experience. Raja also states that AXG is on track to ramp four new product lineups by the end of this year. We know that Ponte Vecchio and Alchemist will be shipping to consumers by the end of this quarter & we can expect the company to also ramp production of Arc-infused Meteor Lake 14th Gen chips which Pat Gelsinger stated will be available in 2023 during the Q2 2022 earnings call. The company will also be sampling its next-gen Rialto Bridge AI GPU to customers in 2023.
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Dakle, stručnjaci samo takvi zajedno s direktorom na čelu parade i nema ništa vjerodostojnije od Raje na Twitteru kad priča da sve ide prema planu i programu. 
Possible "launch date" for Intel’s ARC A5xx and A7xx graphics cards leaked
Citiraj:
Are they coming, or aren’t they? And if so, when? Various media had again written or spoken about a delay, but Intel is said to have now internally decided on a narrower time frame. If they’re going to stick to the current timeframe, the range that’s being colocated to me now is between Aug. 05, 2022 and Sept. 29, 2022. This means that there is enough time to launch the three announced larger models one slice at a time. It is interesting that the internal documents no longer report about a large-scale, joint launch event, but it could rather be a kind of “silent” launch, which could be carried out gradually in the retail sector and via only a few media.
In addition, Intel is obviously preparing already finished cards internally, which will then be made available to handpicked media representatives at short notice for reporting. Which continent will be sampled at all and how broadly the launch will be is, however, completely open. However, the choice of reporters (and content) is unlikely to be left to chance, especially since the board partners were strictly briefed in advance on how to handle the products they produced themselves. Objective reviews will probably only be available when the cards are finally available in stores.
The procedure is not even unusual, because manufacturers are already quite happy to hide their rather “unloved” children. No matter if it’s the Radeon RX 6400 or the GeForce GTX 1630, you always have to laboriously get such parts yourself because you always fear image damage on the part of the manufaturers. Wrongly, if one were to trust the objectivity of the reviewers, but it’s better to generally leave no stone unturned. Based on my experience with the Arc A380 and the imponderables of the drivers (last test with the 3220 and 3259 BETA ) as well as the hardware, one can definitely wait with mixed feelings for what is coming (or maybe not).
I can also spoil that I’ll be posting more details on Sapphire Rapids on Monday, but I need some verification on that. So it’s worth taking a look.
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Izvor: Igor'sLAB
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AMD Ryzen 9 9950X | Noctua NH-U12A chromax.black | MSI MAG B650 Tomahawk Wi-Fi | 128GB Kingston FURY Beast DDR5-5200 | 256GB AData SX8200 Pro NVMe | 2x4TB WD Red Plus | Fractal Define 7 Compact | Seasonic GX-750
AMD Ryzen 5 7600 | Noctua NH-U12A chromax.black | MSI MAG B650 Tomahawk Wi-Fi | 128GB Kingston FURY Beast DDR5-5200 | 256GB AData SX8200 Pro NVMe | 2x12TB WD Red Plus | Fractal Define 7 Compact | eVGA 650 B5
Zadnje izmijenjeno od: The Exiled. 31.07.2022. u 19:48.
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