Tuesday, December 11th 2012

Eurocom Offers New High Performance MXM 3.0b VGA Options

Upgrading notebooks can be easy when dealing with the right hardware, which are designed from the beginning to be VGA upgradeable. The upgrade process is rather straight forward and consists of removing the existing heat sink and thermal solution, removing the graphics card and then installing the new card while adjusting the thermal pads and re-applying thermal paste to the GPU die. After the hardware is installed users then need to download the requisite driver software and they are ready to go. Occasionally the heatsink needs to be modified or a new heatsink is needed.

The simple fact is, many notebooks are just as easy to upgrade as their desktop counterparts. Eurocom notebooks, most notably are extremely easy to upgrade nearly any component and its flaunted in online instructional videos and any corporate communications.
Eurocom uses modular MXM 3.0b VGA technology, which is an industry wide standard. Notebooks or laptops that incorporate MXM 3.0b can be easily upgraded with newer or higher performing cards of the same standard. This allows users who have purchased an upgradeable system to improve the performance and increase the lifespan of their system with an easy upgrade.

Eurocom integrates MXM 3.0b technology into its high performance notebooks because it allows Eurocom notebooks to support the most powerful graphics technology on the market while allowing for continuous upgrade options.

"At Eurocom, we have offered fully upgradeable notebooks to our clients for many years because we believe strongly in the long term benefits it offers; VGA upgradeability allows users to extend lifespan of their equipment while providing various levels of performance and easy migration to newer GPU technologies " Mark Bialic, Eurocom President.

Graphics VGA card technology moves at a feverish pace, it then becomes difficult for many users to keep pace. New graphics technology offers much more than enhanced gaming performance. It can vastly improve a systems ability to display and edit 2D/3D videos and photos as well as digital content creation, 3D animation, CAD/CAM and video production.

A video card upgrade makes sense for almost any computer user looking for a boost in performance for gaming and/or professional applications. Video card upgrades are the second most common upgrade for a desktop computer, next to memory upgrades. Many users are unaware that some notebooks are VGA upgradeable and purchase non-upgradeable notebooks or laptops and shortly after they discover that their "new" computer is already outdated performance wise and they need a replacement system. The problem is, this is extremely expensive and wasteful when a simple VGA upgrade in VGA Upgradeable notebook could provide the required performance boost at a fraction of the cost.

VGA Options
Eurocom offers a wide choice of VGA upgrades for its current and past generation line of upgradeable notebooks and Laptops.
There are 2 performance levels available, supported in single and Dual (SLI or CrossFireX) configuration.
  • Ultra High Performance - approx 100 watts per card
    o 4GB GDDR5 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680M; 1344 CUDA cores;
    o 2GB GDDR5; AMD Radeon HD 7970M; 1280 Stream Processors
  • High Performance - approx 75 watts per card
    o 4GB GDDR5 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 675MX; 960 CUDA cores
    o 1.5GB GDDR5 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 670M; 336 CUDA cores
    o 2GB GDDR5 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 675M; 384 CUDA cores
    o 3GB GDDR5 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 670MX; 960 CUDA cores
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5 Comments on Eurocom Offers New High Performance MXM 3.0b VGA Options

#1
a_ump
interesting

So what other notebook manufacturers are known for such easy upgradability? or is mainly just eurocom that's reputable and does it? i sure in the hell know my HP laptop isn't an easy upgrade.
Posted on Reply
#2
Prima.Vera
MXM 3.0b is not exactly a wide spread standard. The laptops using this can be counted using 2 hands fingers...
Posted on Reply
#3
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
Prima.VeraMXM 3.0b is not exactly a wide spread standard. The laptops using this can be counted using 2 hands fingers...
I'd say MXM overall isn't wide spread.
Posted on Reply
#4
3870x2
This seems like a step in the right direction, but the market is too small and the price too large for this to become widespread.
Posted on Reply
#5
Klean
I really like this

Its seems like, currently in the market, computer manufacturers simply want their customers to buy a new system whenever their is a component that breaks.

The computer market should function more like the car market. When a component of your car breaks, most people simply get it repaired, while on the other hand when your notebook breaks people just buy a new one. Big time waste.

Its probably cheaper to spend a little more buying a new system and get one that can be upgraded then to save a little money and have to replace it when something breaks.
Posted on Reply
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