Posted on 05/13/2009 8:30:36 AM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
ION. NVIDIA has been touting the term non-stop for what seems like years now but what has only really been months. Essentially a platform that marries the existing GeForce 9400M chipset with a low power processor, ION is the company's attempt to make themselves relevant in the world of the netbook and the sub-$300 PC.
The ION graphics processor, as it is now SOMETIMES called by NVIDIA staff, was first evaluated here at PC Perspective in early February after NVIDIA had made the round promoting the product during CES. At that time the ION product was really aimed more at the mobile market but has since been shifted to target the lively-hood of $300-500 PC. The new Acer Aspire Revo is a great example of what NVIDIA envisions for the platform; at least for now.
Make no bones about it - the NVIDIA ION Graphics Processor is really the same thing as the GeForce 9400M chipset that is used in Apple's MacBook, MacBook Pro and iMac PCs. This iteration of the product shown above indicates support for a FSB-based processor including the Core 2 family, Pentium 4, Celeron and the low-power Atom CPU. Other than the core logic provided by the processor, the NVIDIA chip handles just about everything else including graphics, memory controller, data and peripheral connections, expansion ports, SATA and more.
NVIDIA's reference design for the ION Platform
Today's re-release of the ION platform is less about systems (like the review reference system above) or netbooks than it is about getting these products into the hands of consumers and enthusiasts looking for a nice project-piece. In this article we will be taking a look at the first available NVIDIA ION platform motherboard from Zotac.
Acer launches first NVIDIA Ion-based nettop: AspireRevo
Every PC I’ve bought with on board video has been so slow I’ve added a real video card to do any real gaming. Does this resolve that issue? If so I might by a Laptop next time.
Would love to build a low-cost, low-noise, small form-factor machine to work as my MythTV frontend/backend, freeing my development machine for writing software.
They do try some games on it....see the detail at the article website.
See the link at #6 for some MBoards....without the CPU.
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