Friday, January 9th 2009

AMD Launches ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 Series Graphics for Notebooks

AMD today announced ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 series graphics, its next generation series of notebook graphics processors, bringing leading gaming and multimedia technology from the desktop to notebooks. These feature-rich graphics processors redefine mobile gaming with advanced capabilities including support for the latest Microsoft DirectX 10.1 games, a home theatre-quality HD multimedia experience, and energy-efficient features for long battery life to help users get the most out of their notebook at work, at home or at play.
The ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4800 series redefines HD gaming performance with support for ATI CrossFireX technology to deliver up to one teraFLOP of performance power. ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4600 series offers a superb balance of performance and energy efficiency. Optimal for thin and light notebooks, the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4300 and ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4500 series provide exceptional battery life for anyone on the go.

"ASUS constantly strives in delivering the best possible mobile computing solutions to our customers for exceptional multimedia experiences," said Alvin Chou, Senior Product Manager for ASUS' Notebook Business Unit. "We are pleased to offer the world's first notebooks with the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4650 graphics in the ASUS N51Tp and N81Vp; and ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4570 graphics in the F81Se."

"The MSI EX625 notebook, with ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4600 series graphics, and the GT725 notebook, with ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4800 series graphics, represent the pinnacle of gaming and multimedia graphics for the mobile platform," said Eric Kuo, MSI Sales Director. "AMD has exceptional graphics success that will bring unprecedented power and performance for the mobile platform."

Redefining HD Gaming
All ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 series graphics processors feature powerful 3D engines derived from the popular ATI Radeon HD 4800 series architecture and are capable of up to twice the gaming performance of the predecessor ATI Mobility Radeon HD 3000 Series at their respective power levels. The ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4800 series graphics processors are the industry's first to support GDDR5 memory technology, providing nearly twice the memory bandwidth of GDDR3 and GDDR4, contributing to stunning improvements in game play and performance. Also featuring support for Microsoft DirectX 10.1, the entire ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 series is ready to tackle the demands of next-generation game titles for crisp, detail-rich images and outstanding visual effects that deliver an unparalleled level of realism. Extreme gamers can push the boundaries of gaming performance with the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4870 graphics processor delivering up to 1.8 times the performance compared to previous AMD discrete mobile graphics processors and with ATI CrossFireX technology, combine the performance of two ATI Mobility Radeon graphics processors to produce uncompromising image quality in any of today's demanding 3D games.

"We're proud to highlight ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4870 as the first notebook GPU to support specially designed, ultra-high bandwidth GDDR5 graphics memory to unleash the full-throttle gaming experience normally reserved for the high-end desktop gaming rigs," said Rick Bergman, senior vice president and general manager of AMD, Graphics Products Group. "Now, notebooks equipped with one or a pair of these speedy graphics processors can take on just about any PC game and run them smoothly at their maximum option settings.

"And for gaming-friendly multimedia notebooks, the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4600 is the most potent power-efficient notebook GPU we've ever produced, making high-performance gaming practical in lightweight, elegantly styled notebooks like never before."

Stunning HD multimedia experience
Home theatre enthusiasts can enjoy full 1080p HD viewing anywhere they want on HD-capable panels, monitors or televisions. Using AMD's second generation Unified Video Decoder (UVD), the CPU is freed from other tasks so even when managing processor-intensive content such as Blu-ray movies, users can still instant message friends or conduct virus scans in the background without interruption. This also helps lower power consumption and reduces the need for high fan settings, enabling a quieter experience. DVD upscaling allows for enhanced picture quality when watching standard definition content on 1080p HDTV, while dynamic contrast adjusts the contrast and brightness during scenes to bring a crisp, vibrant picture to viewers. Specifically designed for HD video enthusiasts, ATI Avivo HD, an advanced image and video processing display technology, is found throughout the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 series and provides brilliant colors, sharp images, and smooth playback of Blu-ray and HD video content on HD-capable panels, monitors or televisions. In addition, selected ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 series graphics processors models are also the first ever mobile graphics solution that has advanced hi-definition audio capabilities using HDMI with 7.1 digital surround sound and DisplayPort Audio to create an immersive, home theatre-class experience.

Leading energy efficiency
AMD remains committed to designing energy efficient technology with optimal performance -- the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 series is no exception. The new mobile graphics family features energy efficient, second generation 55nm process technology that, in the case of the ATI Mobility Radeon 4870 GPU, delivers an increase in performance-per-watt of more than sixty percent over the previous generation. Additional power-saving features include ATI PowerPlay, ATI PowerXpress, and ATI Switchable Graphics technologies.

ATI PowerPlay, an activity-based power management technology, intuitively conserves energy at idle or when demand is low and automatically adjusts between low and high states for greater performance when needed and energy conservation for long battery life. ATI PowerXpress and ATI Switchable Graphics technologies dynamically switch between the ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 series discrete graphics processor and the integrated graphics processor in the notebook -- all in real-time without needing to reboot -- to help provide exceptional performance when needed and to help extend battery life when on the move.

"The ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4600 and ATI Mobility HD 4500 series offer outstanding performance per watt giving notebook manufacturers the ability to pack significantly more performance into thin designs as the previous years equivalent models," said Bergman. "And for value oriented and ultrathin notebooks, these GPUs enable superior HD entertainment on the go coupled with low power requirements. We're delivering a top-to-bottom line of mobile discrete graphics processors that deliver on the AMD hallmark of leading performance and energy efficiency."

The ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 series features a wide range of power-efficient and performance optimized configurations that vary in terms of size, operating speed and performance to satisfy the discrete graphics requirements of products ranging from ultra-mobile sub-notebooks to high-end gaming portables, small form-factor desktop PCs and everything in between.

Unprecedented Performance
ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 series graphics also provide performance benefits for defense applications.

"A critical component of Mercury's Converged Sensor Network Architecture is pushing substantial computing capability closer to the sensor in embedded environments. GPUs have proven to be well-suited for this. Mercury's relationship with AMD affords us the ability to leverage cutting-edge GPU technology into embedded systems for this purpose," said Scott Thieret, Technology Director for GPU Computing at Mercury Computer Systems. "The dual ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4870 GPUs, as deployed in our Sensor Stream Computing Platform, provide a teraFLOP of floating-point performance in a single 6U VXS card. This unprecedented compute density in an embedded system allows Mercury to solve tough stream computing problems for our military and commercial customers who contend with stringent size, power, and weight constraints."

The ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 series graphics processors have been designed into quality notebooks from many leading notebook manufacturers such as ASUS, MSI and others, with models planned for availability beginning in Q1 2009. For more information visit www.amd.com/mobility/hd4000.
Source: AMD
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12 Comments on AMD Launches ATI Mobility Radeon HD 4000 Series Graphics for Notebooks

#1
Valdez
gddr5? It's not a good idea for notebooks because of high power usage.
Posted on Reply
#2
Voyager
AMD should start to make drivers for these mobile radeons, because Nvidia started!
Posted on Reply
#3
TheMailMan78
Big Member
I bet all the Mac nuts paying 3,000 dollars for a laptop wish Apple would have went with an ATI chipset right about now.
Posted on Reply
#4
[I.R.A]_FBi
TheMailMan78I bet all the Mac nuts paying 3,000 dollars for a laptop wish (Cr)Apple would have went with an ATI chipset right about now.
You forgot something :)

If AMD launched neo earlier maybe that wouldve been feasible.
Posted on Reply
#5
mdm-adph
TheMailMan78I bet all the Mac nuts paying 3,000 dollars for a laptop wish Apple would have went with an ATI chipset right about now.
Well, personally I'd prefer an ATI chipset too, but the 9600M GT's or whatever's in the new Macbooks actually aren't all that bad.
Posted on Reply
#6
From_Nowhere
Although the 9600M-GT isn't the greatest in the world. My old M76M (AKA ATI Mobility Radeon HD 2600XT) outperforms it. Anyway these Mobility HD 4000's though make me wish I held off on buying a laptop.

EDIT:

Looking Back, Actually Performed similarly.
Posted on Reply
#7
mdm-adph
From_NowhereAlthough the 9600M-GT isn't the greatest in the world. My old M76M (AKA ATI Mobility Radeon HD 2600XT) outperforms it. Anyway these Mobility HD 4000's though make me wish I held off on buying a laptop.
That's true -- I have a feeling that because ATI's GPU's are now so small, that the mobile versions hardly differ at all from the desktop versions -- the 4670 mobile version is probably going to be fast as hell.
Posted on Reply
#8
TheMailMan78
Big Member
[I.R.A]_FBiYou forgot something :)

If AMD launched neo earlier maybe that wouldve been feasible.
I doubt it. ATI=AMD. Also the price of an Apple laptop was never justified. Now even more so. However you never looked more stupid....Um er cool with an Apple with its new INTERNAL battery :laugh:

Just to let you know FBi I'm not talking about you ;) I'm talking about the macidiots out there. I'v been using macs since the day before the clones were out. They just are not what they used to be. Now they're just over priced status symbols for people who don't know any better. Heres an example: ATI X1900 costs $400.00!
Posted on Reply
#9
mdm-adph
TheMailMan78I doubt it. ATI=AMD. Also the price of an Apple laptop was never justified. Now even more so. However you never looked more stupid....Um er cool with an Apple with its new INTERNAL battery :laugh:

Just to let you know FBi I'm not talking about you ;) I'm talking about the macidiots out there. I'v been using macs since the day before the clones were out. They just are not what they used to be. Now they're just over priced status symbols for people who don't know any better. Heres an example: ATI X1900 costs $400.00!
Wow -- that must be an old, old card that they haven't changed the price on! Hey, blame ATI for that, not Apple.

The prices Apple charges for video cards when you're buying Mac Pro's actually aren't all that bad, considering they have to be programmed completely differently. For instance, an 8800GT 512 for only $150. They're going to mark it up a little bit -- every PC manufacturer does that, too. ;)

(I'm looking at you, DELL, with your $100 HD 2400 cards...)
Posted on Reply
#10
PCpraiser100
Finally!

My frined is already ashamed he bought a book with an HD 2600XT chipset so I better tell him to swap up!
Posted on Reply
#11
Mandown
mdm-adphThat's true -- I have a feeling that because ATI's GPU's are now so small, that the mobile versions hardly differ at all from the desktop versions -- the 4670 mobile version is probably going to be fast as hell.
When I see a good priced 17" laptop with a 4670 I'm sold!:rockout: I have two 4670's in my other computers they are just making my 3850's look so bad. Its small no extra power needed and play most games with plenty of eye candy.:D Then i can get rid of my crappy hp laptop.
Posted on Reply
#12
Hayder_Master
cool , that's great , my friend have an laptop with hd 3200 still use it as gamer laptop
Posted on Reply
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