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Intel shows some concept art of its Xe graphics card
Last week Intel had ab Odyssey community event, in their presentation, they have been showing concept art of Xe which they just submitted to show off a little. Xe will be the 2020 release of Intel's' first consumer-targeted graphics card (as well as intended for the professional field of course).
Intel showed some concept art designs submitted at its kick-off community event. In the images shown we see a relatively small GPU with a single fan. That is all that can be shown though, as there is no technical information available otherwise. Have peek.
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#5654114 Posted on: 03/26/2019 01:20 AM
News flash!!!!! It is going to look like an expansion card!!! It may even have a pci express connector, video outputs, and a fan!! o_O
News flash!!!!! It is going to look like an expansion card!!! It may even have a pci express connector, video outputs, and a fan!! o_O
waltc3
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#5654125 Posted on: 03/26/2019 01:39 AM
So it is fake, then. Hmmmm....nothing released officially by Intel for an actual product of any kind. We seem to be headed toward new types of vaporware these days...
I note that the thing looks as though it might melt in its own heat! I see the interesting little vents, of course. Wow--"fan concept art" for new GPUs. Alrighty, then....next perhaps we will see fan-created benchmarks...?
It was confirmed as what the article states - it's a community submitted concept piece.
So it is fake, then. Hmmmm....nothing released officially by Intel for an actual product of any kind. We seem to be headed toward new types of vaporware these days...

m4dn355
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Joined: 2007-06-15
Senior Member
Posts: 253
Joined: 2007-06-15
#5654339 Posted on: 03/26/2019 05:18 PM
I expect RX460 performance-level and annual driver update.
I expect RX460 performance-level and annual driver update.
tunaphish6
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Posts: 99
Joined: 2014-12-03
#5654350 Posted on: 03/26/2019 05:48 PM
I feel like I'm going through the various stages of grief with this.
My natural inclination was that Intel would be insane trying to compete with AMD and nVidia, especially considering when I initially read about it, I still had a falling out with AMD and considered nVidia the only viable choice for high-end gaming (still kinda is).
However, despite AMD's APU being a more viable option, people people still use Intel's integrated GPU's for gaming, and technically it's still more relatively capable than the integrated graphics of yester-year.
And then eventually, I was like, 'why the hell not'. Intel seemingly already has the resources, and should recover easily if it flopped. And even if all it was was some low-end entry--one notch above integrated, it still gives you another option in the market, especially when GPU's are leveraged for content-creation. I wouldn't mind having an Intel GPU handy just for Quick Sync.
In fact, that might be a marketing strategy for Intel--come up with some new proprietary API(?) akin to nVidia's CUDA, and people will be buying them up. Intel is still so synonymous productivity and business applications--despite AMD being just as viable--if not even moreso, for both servers and individual workstations, that developers would lining up to adopt.
nice little box, let's hope it has some horsepower.
I feel like I'm going through the various stages of grief with this.
My natural inclination was that Intel would be insane trying to compete with AMD and nVidia, especially considering when I initially read about it, I still had a falling out with AMD and considered nVidia the only viable choice for high-end gaming (still kinda is).
However, despite AMD's APU being a more viable option, people people still use Intel's integrated GPU's for gaming, and technically it's still more relatively capable than the integrated graphics of yester-year.
And then eventually, I was like, 'why the hell not'. Intel seemingly already has the resources, and should recover easily if it flopped. And even if all it was was some low-end entry--one notch above integrated, it still gives you another option in the market, especially when GPU's are leveraged for content-creation. I wouldn't mind having an Intel GPU handy just for Quick Sync.
In fact, that might be a marketing strategy for Intel--come up with some new proprietary API(?) akin to nVidia's CUDA, and people will be buying them up. Intel is still so synonymous productivity and business applications--despite AMD being just as viable--if not even moreso, for both servers and individual workstations, that developers would lining up to adopt.
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Fan art, apparently.