Nvidia to make chipsets for Via CPUsEnough with the buyout rumours already!By Charlie Demerjian: Tuesday, 25 March 2008, 2:43 PMIN A SURE SIGN of the coming apocalypse, Nvidia is going to make chipsets for Via CPUs. If you remember, Via closed down its chipset division, and NV needs to find a CPU partner it hasn't terminally pissed off.Not much more to say to it than that. NV can't buy Via (allcaps) for a number of reasons, so this is the only door open for the chipset guys. A close working relationship or partnership makes sense for a lot of reasons, and could greatly benefit both sides. All the rumours of buyout talks for the last week were just rumours, this is what was happening behind closed doors.
Intel shelves consumer LarrabeeDelayed not cancelledBy Nick FarrellMonday, 7 December 2009, 11:45INTEL HAS DELAYED plans to market the consumer version of its Larrabee graphics processor less than three months after it showed off the chip at the Fall Intel Developer Forum.Chipzilla reportedly decided to shelve the project for now because it has not got far enough fast enough to become a viable product soon. Larrabee was supposed to be in the shops next year.The move means that Intel's push into the consumer videogame and parallel computing arenas has stalled. It leaves those fields open for Nvidia and AMD, which are pushing their products into these market niches.However Intel is apparently not abandoning its plans for Larrabee to make a splash in the high-performance computing (HPC) market.At the Supercomputing show last month, Intel demonstrated an over-clocked Larrabee graphics processor managing a teraFLOPS processing speed.Intel does not foresee strong demand for graphics processors in mainstream computing in the near term and thinks that its eight-core Nehalem EX processors will be able to handle most highly parallel workloads.Larrabee will be still be available as a platform for developers to design applications for parallel computing workloads and HPC but it will not see the light of day in the consumer market next year, an Intel spokesman said. µ