NVIDIA NOW Has a Laptop Chip
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Nvidia, PC and Chip
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Nvidia’s new chips will power laptop workstations and mini desktop PCs at first. These days, Nvidia primarily sells AI data center products, and its traditional consumer devices feel like more of a side project.
Along with a new ARM CPU for Windows laptops, Nvidia’s Computex news includes another feature it’s adding to the DLSS 4.5 suite ahead of that other DLSS AI graphics update. Called Ray Reconstruction,
Nvidia is retiring its classic Control Panel for GeForce users, moving driver, display, and 3D settings into the Nvidia app.
Five years after its original introduction, NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 3060 is making an unexpected return through a new production run from board partners. Colorful has become one of the first manufacturers to bring refreshed inventory to market with the launch of the Battle Axe GeForce RTX 3060 DUO 12GB V2.
It’s the world’s worst kept secret that Nvidia is about to announce its own Arm-powered laptop chips at Computex this weekend, and now Microsoft, Nvidia, and Arm are all openly teasing the announcement. The Windows and Nvidia GeForce accounts on X both posted “A new era of PC” earlier today, and now Arm has followed up with an identical post.
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NVIDIA GeForce Game Ready Driver 610.47 is here, and it quietly killed the classic control panel
There is a new GeForce Game Ready Driver out today, and on the surface it looks like a routine game-optimization release. Dig one line deeper, though, and you will find something a little more historic buried in the notes: the classic NVIDIA Control Panel is officially gone for GeForce users,
NVIDIA RTX 3060 12GB graphics cards are returning to Chinese retail stores as Colorful prepares ongoing weekly restocks.
Nvidia’s GeForce RTX 5050 desktop graphics card announcement was a bit of a surprise—an RTX 4050 desktop card never emerged, so we figured this generation would be no different. But here it is: At $249, the RTX 5050 is Nvidia’s most affordable new ...
Shiny new Nvidia apps like the GeForce Experience and the “Nvidia app” have come and gone, but the old Nvidia Control Panel and its rotating green Nvidia logo have existed as an option for managing basic settings since it was originally introduced in 2006.
The technology giant's boss Jensen Huang called the move the "reinvention of the computer".