I totally forgot about the switch. My point still stands though. 90% of handheld gaming devices, so long as they arent Android devices run AMD chips. The MSI Claw with its Intel chip is an outlier. I think GN was saying that AMD and MSi were having some drama between them so either AMD declined to supply the chips or MSI thought they would be smart and pick an Intel chip. I dont know the details.
When you look at the Asus RoG handhelds, Steam Decks, Lenovo Legion handhelds. etc etc they are all AMD.
Even the ultra portable GPDs are using AMD. Id still say Nvidia is outnumbered and outgunned but of course we'll wait and see what the future holds.
Those same chips in handhelds also have quite a share in the mini-PC space (which seems to be increasing at a surprising pace), whereas Intel has the lead in the really entry level ones (with their N100).
most irrelevant among consoles imo.
That's your opinion and it's ok, but it's still a device that existing and has a considerable market share.
now that could be really interesting. looking further, it says it's supposed to be on tsmc 3nm and released some time in 2025. rumors say H1 2025, but those are just rumors. Never been a huge fan of portable computers, but since I bought a Zen4 laptop last year, I've grown quite fond of them. It's a weird pairing though, the cpu is 7000 series (8c/16t), but the igpu is still vega. it's quite fast and efficient for work and light entertainment though.
Off-topic, but I'm still kinda disappointed in the current thin laptop offerings. My LG Gram is the perfect laptop for me (big battery, ~1kg), but the CPU in it is showing its age, and LG didn't come up with a newer 14" model. I always prefer light devices with a long battery duration that can get
some work done, but I have a beefy desktop that I can just remote to whenever I want.
A M4 Pro competitor would be really nice, but seems like a dream too far away outside of the Apple ecosystem. The only mobile chip with a bus bigger than the usual 128-bit is strix halo, but that's a 100W+ chip that doesn't make sense for something portable.
Lunarlake is pretty interesting, but won't be getting any newer models or beefier models. There aren't that many 13~14" models with 70Wh+ batteries available, and the same applies to Strix Point.
I doubt Arrow Lake H will be as efficient as LNL or Strix Point, but we shall see.
A MBP (which has 72Wh battery, the Air has a way smaller one) with 32GB goes past $2k, which doesn't make me happy, and I also hate MacOS (currently have a M3 Max that annoys the heck out of me).
Qcom CPUs for laptops are pretty underwhelming, expensive, and their linux support is really bad.
So yeah, let's see if this Mediatek+nvidia product will pan out and how good it'll be, it might be interesting. Panther lake might also be nice.
Since I'm not desperate for a new laptop, I can keep waiting until one that I can fall in love with appears.
I guess we discussed it already, but I don't think this is really and argument you can make against nvidia.
does it even make it to the steam hardware list ?
It actually does. Still a small margin, but it's what pushed the linux marketshare to be bigger than the MacOS one.