Wednesday, April 13th 2022
Intel Arc A350M Mobile Graphics Card Pictured & Tested
The recently announced Intel Arc A350M mobile graphics card is now shipping with it's recent debut in the South-Korean exclusive Samsung Galaxy Book2 Pro laptop. The A350M is the entry-level Arc Alchemist skew from Intel featuring an ACM-G11 GPU with 768 shaders and 4 GB of GDDR6 video memory. This specific Samsung Galaxy Book2 Pro model is also equipped with an Intel Core i5-1240P Alder Lake processor and 16 GB of LPDDR5 memory. The Intel video drivers (30.0.101.132) included with the laptop appear to have issues correctly identifying the card however newer versions are available which should address this.
The laptop was tested in various synthetic and gaming scenarios with the Arc A350M (30 W) performing anywhere from 40% to 60% faster than the NVIDIA MX450 (25 W). The Intel A350M reached a maximum boost clock of 2.2 GHz during gaming with the card offering adequate performance in eSports and older titles. The Galaxy Book2 Pro model with 32 GB of memory and a 1 TB SSD (NT950XEE-XD72S) is currently available to purchase directly from Samsung Korea for 2,520,000 KRW (2,054 USD). Intel has noted that more laptops featuring Arc Alchemist mobile graphics should be launching worldwide in the coming weeks.
Sources:
bullslab (via VideoCardz), 사도될까
The laptop was tested in various synthetic and gaming scenarios with the Arc A350M (30 W) performing anywhere from 40% to 60% faster than the NVIDIA MX450 (25 W). The Intel A350M reached a maximum boost clock of 2.2 GHz during gaming with the card offering adequate performance in eSports and older titles. The Galaxy Book2 Pro model with 32 GB of memory and a 1 TB SSD (NT950XEE-XD72S) is currently available to purchase directly from Samsung Korea for 2,520,000 KRW (2,054 USD). Intel has noted that more laptops featuring Arc Alchemist mobile graphics should be launching worldwide in the coming weeks.
16 Comments on Intel Arc A350M Mobile Graphics Card Pictured & Tested
MX series is dead after Ryzen 6000 and the new Intel ARC series.
But from what I've seen the intel GPU has a lot of severe software bugs.
The thing is that Intel doesn't need to destroy the MX series. Just to be able to offer an alternative while selling CPUs and chipsets.
Still, it's nice that Intel finally has something useful to put into laptops GPU wise. I'm an AMD fan but have always bought Intel-based laptops because they're still ahead of AMD as a whole platform. Only recently have AMD put out some nice APU based laptops but Intel is ready to answer that with the Xe architecture.
So I'll continue to buy or build AMD based desktop with Nvidia GPU and Intel based laptop with (Intel, AMD or Nvidia) GPU.
and this is videocardz article about this: according this will be star aroun 40w % more performance than mx 450 25w* this stay more or less around gtx 1050ti performance and maybe have similar performance thn mx 450 30.5w 8gbps** but more or less 15% less than mx 450 30.5w 10gbps*** and around 20% less geforce gtx 1650 ddr5 desktop**** :)
Graphics glitches
All for the low price of 2K?
videocardz article :)
Example -
rx 680m is 12 CU - 100%
rx 5500xt is 16 CU - 155%
performance difference - 55% going from iGPU to 115w dGPU
what will happend when you remove 25% of all CUs? Basic mathematics - 116%, this will be the peformance of the 6400xt. Give or take 5%, and you wont see miracle for Intel.
I will laugh at all of you when (IF) intel release their trash, because I knew a year ago what will be the true performance of their dGPU and the more results come out, the more credible what I say seems
See you in the new thread. :D