rajah
2011/11/12, 02:32
وقت برا ترجمه نداشتم اگه توضیح خواستین در خدمتم
Hoping to fulfill the eye-candy requirements of next-generation tablets, smartphones and smart TVs, ARM has designed a new graphics solution, the Mali-T658 GPU which is supposed to deliver up to ten times the performance of the Mali-400 MP GPU found in Samsung's Galaxy S II (the Exynos versions).
The Mali-T658 can scale up to 8 cores, it was designed to work seamlessly with the ARM Cortex-A15 and Cortex-A7 processors, and offers support for multiple APIs including DirectX 11, OpenCL 1.1, OpenVG 1.1 and OpenGL ES 1.1, 2.0.
"Next generation consumer devices based on the Mali-T658 GPU will address the growing user expectation for slick user interfaces and desktop-class graphics," said Pete Hutton, general manager, Media Processing Div***on, ARM. "Intuitive user interfaces will mean that consumers can access the full functionality of their connected devices, for richer user experiences. This includes HD gaming and new compute-intensive applications, such as augmented reality."
Unfortunately there were no Mali-T658-based products announced but ARM says its new GPU is being supported by Fujitsu Semiconductor, LG Electronics, Nufront and Samsung so things are in motion. We'll probably just have to wait until 2012 to see the Mali-T658 at work on actual hardware.
فقط کاربران عضو قادر به مشاهده لینکها هستند.
منبغ:tcmagazine
Hoping to fulfill the eye-candy requirements of next-generation tablets, smartphones and smart TVs, ARM has designed a new graphics solution, the Mali-T658 GPU which is supposed to deliver up to ten times the performance of the Mali-400 MP GPU found in Samsung's Galaxy S II (the Exynos versions).
The Mali-T658 can scale up to 8 cores, it was designed to work seamlessly with the ARM Cortex-A15 and Cortex-A7 processors, and offers support for multiple APIs including DirectX 11, OpenCL 1.1, OpenVG 1.1 and OpenGL ES 1.1, 2.0.
"Next generation consumer devices based on the Mali-T658 GPU will address the growing user expectation for slick user interfaces and desktop-class graphics," said Pete Hutton, general manager, Media Processing Div***on, ARM. "Intuitive user interfaces will mean that consumers can access the full functionality of their connected devices, for richer user experiences. This includes HD gaming and new compute-intensive applications, such as augmented reality."
Unfortunately there were no Mali-T658-based products announced but ARM says its new GPU is being supported by Fujitsu Semiconductor, LG Electronics, Nufront and Samsung so things are in motion. We'll probably just have to wait until 2012 to see the Mali-T658 at work on actual hardware.
فقط کاربران عضو قادر به مشاهده لینکها هستند.
منبغ:tcmagazine