Saturday, December 19th 2009

AMD developer page reveals HD 5800 Mobility Series
AMD's Catalyst PC Vendor ID List has been updated to reflect their latest product updates, which surprisingly includes "ATI Mobility Radeon HD 5800" models.The models listed are "Broadway XT", "Broadway Pro/LT". While it is certain that Broadway XT will become the Mobility Radeon HD 5870, sources differ whether Broadway Pro/LT will be two distinct products initially: Mobility Radeon HD 5850 and Mobility Radeon HD 5830 or if there will be only a Mobility Radeon HD 5850 product first.
In addition to these confirmed models there are rumors about that describe "Madison" (Mobility HD 5700) and "Park" (Mobility HD 5400). This would give AMD a full mobile DirectX 11 low-power GPU lineup to compete in the mobile market.
Source:
AMD Vendor ID List
In addition to these confirmed models there are rumors about that describe "Madison" (Mobility HD 5700) and "Park" (Mobility HD 5400). This would give AMD a full mobile DirectX 11 low-power GPU lineup to compete in the mobile market.
33 Comments on AMD developer page reveals HD 5800 Mobility Series
It was supposed to be a 40nm RV740 (desktop HD4770) with GDDR5 and it would fit 15" laptops. AMD did quite a big fuss about it back in February 2009:
ati.amd.com/products/mobilityradeonhd4800/4860_index.html
techreport.com/discussions.x/16506
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dw6JE8wPM-E
They even announced two Asus notebooks that would sport the GPU: 17" K70AB and 15" K51AB.
www.engadget.com/2009/03/04/asus-k-series-laptops-hands-on/
This mobile GPU was going to be faster than the G92-based GTX260M, at a lower price point and lower power consumption. These K-series laptops would game faster than Asus' own gaming G-series (which, by then, still had the crappy 9600M GT).
Besides, using ATI Powerplay, the laptops would use the IGP HD3200 for low power and run up to 5 hours using a 6 cell battery.
In the end, the Mobility HD4860 never got a single design win. Asus quietly cancelled the K51AB and launched the K70AB with the low-end HD4570.
So I stand by what I said. AMD's paper launches for notebooks mean nothing to me.
I don't know how, but nVidia has always had all the design wins for gaming laptops in the past 2 years, despite having inferior products.
and im fairly excited for the mobile market a 5850 / 5870 for laptops (think ridiculous price) will give a nice boost for laptop gaming but thats still a joke in and off itself
Forgot System specs of that laptop are follows:
Dell Inspiron 9100/XPS Gen 1
15.4" WUXGA (Maximum Resolution is 1920x1200 at 75)
865PE Motherboard
P4 Gallatin Core 478
2GB PC 3200 DDR
MR 9800 256 (OC to 459/416 from 350/300)
100GB 7200 Hitachi
150 Watt Wallwart
Most probably, Apple will just update the discrete GPU in the Macbook Pro to the GT240M, which has the same power envelope, should be cheaper to manufacture now and has a bit more shader power.
This is THE laptop to get.
I think for $200 more you get a 2nd HDD in RAID and a Blu-Ray player rather than the normal DVD.