Tuesday, August 29th 2023

Intel Arc Alive & Well for Next-gen - Battlemage GPU Spotted During Malaysia Lab Tour

HardwareLuxx's editor, Andreas Schilling, was invited by Intel Tech Tour to attend a recent press event at the company's manufacturing facility and test labs in Malaysia. Invited media representatives were allowed to observe ongoing work on next generation client and data center-oriented products. He posted a short summary of these observations via social media: "I've seen wafers with Emerald Rapids XCC on them, that were being cut. Not a surprise at all, but still...also MTL682_C0, so Meteor Lake with 6 P-Cores, 8 E-Cores and GT2 Graphic Tile tested in a C0 stepping and finally the Failure Lab already saw BMG G10 - Battlemage is real." We have been hearing mixed mutterings about the status of Team Blue's next-gen Arc GPU technology, with more concrete evidence of its existence popping up around mid-August—namely in the shape of two Battlemage interposers, BGA2362-BMG-X2 and BGA2727-BMG-X3, uploaded to Intel's DESIGN-iN Tools website.

Schilling elaborated further in his full report: "In the Failure Analysis Lab, we came across a tray that evidently contained chips from the next Arc generation - at least, there were already corresponding chips in the analysis, which were clearly labeled as BMG G10." This chip looks to be lined up to succeed the current Alchemist ACM-G10 GPU, as seen on Intel Arc A750 and A770 discrete graphics cards. A leaked product roadmap shows Intel targeting a Battlemage launch around Q2 - Q3 2024, with the aforementioned G10 having a TDP rating of <225 W, as well as another variant—G21—rated for a maximum power consumption of 150 W.
Sources: Hardwareluxx, VideoCardz, Wccftech, Andreas Schilling Tweet
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29 Comments on Intel Arc Alive & Well for Next-gen - Battlemage GPU Spotted During Malaysia Lab Tour

#26
Easo
gurusmiIf one builds a pool he has to afford the water also. ;)
One assumes that if you can afford a pool you can afford to maintain it. If you can't afford maintenance you should not have the pool in the first place. I really do not believe that people with RTX 4090 care about their power bills.
First world issues, lol
/shrug
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#27
gurusmi
I plan to build a AMD 6950xt or 7900xt into my build. The first has been to calculate the PSU-size. The energy delivering company will be happy to have me as a customer. :D Right now with my actual rig (3800x, 5700XT) i have a yearly power bill of around 3800kWh. Usually used by a 3 person household. And that will raise as my new rig will have a 7950X and a (ket's say) 7900XT running at 24/7.
Posted on Reply
#28
Onyx Turbine
gurusmiI plan to build a AMD 6950xt or 7900xt into my build. The first has been to calculate the PSU-size. The energy delivering company will be happy to have me as a customer. :D Right now with my actual rig (3800x, 5700XT) i have a yearly power bill of around 3800kWh. Usually used by a 3 person household. And that will raise as my new rig will have a 7950X and a (ket's say) 7900XT running at 24/7.
1 person 2750 kWh as such a high end card would literally be another nail in the coffin
Posted on Reply
#29
gurusmi
Aehh. Nope. A bit more than 2.750kWh. One person 3.818 kWh. ;)

If one needss a electrical Wheelchair, has (2) 3D Printers (SLA, FDM), needs to use a router for telephoning (because of IP telephony charged by the provider) and cook electrically every day that could happen. I'm paying round about 120€ per month for the electrical energy. Therefor i don't need much for heating and hot water (side costs of the rent). Also my salary is not the lowest as a freelancer.At all my anual income tax is much nuch higher
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