QCH
9 May 2008, 5:14pm
Replacing an entire graphics card just became a bit easier today. Asus (http://www.asus.com/news_show.aspx?id=11101) announced that it is releasing the world's first upgradeable graphics card. The Splendid HD 3850M from Asus looks no different than the average GPU except it's a bit shorter than ATI's HD 3850 (27 percent, in fact).
asus_box.jpg
The real fun begins when you remove the cooler. Under the cooler you'll find three MXM (Mobile PCI Express Module) slots (one on top and two underneath). This allows customers to purchase future MXMs to upgrade their their graphics cards without replacing the actual card.
As Tom's Hardware (http://www.tomshardware.com/news/asus-graphics-card,5324.html) reported today, Asus's new card offers another possible upgrade beyond just ATI cards.
Thanks to a modular design, you will be able to upgrade to upcoming MXM modules, including ATI’s RV770 and RV870 chips (Radeon HD 4800, 5800 series). Interestingly, there should be no issue to put a Nvidia-GPU based MXM module onto this card, since there is no limiting logic.
Tom's also features photos of an engineering sample triple-MXM prototype card (http://www.tomshardware.com/news/asus-graphics-card,5324.html), so be sure to take a look.
Some of the other features of this card:
Lower power consumption using ATI's PowerPlay technology
10426 3DMark06 score (600 over ATI's reference design)
512 MB of DDR3 RAM at 828 MHz
256-bit memory interface
Graphics chip at 668 HMz
2560x1600 max resolution via DVI-I port
asus_box.jpg
The real fun begins when you remove the cooler. Under the cooler you'll find three MXM (Mobile PCI Express Module) slots (one on top and two underneath). This allows customers to purchase future MXMs to upgrade their their graphics cards without replacing the actual card.
As Tom's Hardware (http://www.tomshardware.com/news/asus-graphics-card,5324.html) reported today, Asus's new card offers another possible upgrade beyond just ATI cards.
Thanks to a modular design, you will be able to upgrade to upcoming MXM modules, including ATI’s RV770 and RV870 chips (Radeon HD 4800, 5800 series). Interestingly, there should be no issue to put a Nvidia-GPU based MXM module onto this card, since there is no limiting logic.
Tom's also features photos of an engineering sample triple-MXM prototype card (http://www.tomshardware.com/news/asus-graphics-card,5324.html), so be sure to take a look.
Some of the other features of this card:
Lower power consumption using ATI's PowerPlay technology
10426 3DMark06 score (600 over ATI's reference design)
512 MB of DDR3 RAM at 828 MHz
256-bit memory interface
Graphics chip at 668 HMz
2560x1600 max resolution via DVI-I port