Linked by David Adams on Sat 8th Mar 2008 00:19 UTC, submitted by irbis
Graphics, User Interfaces "AMD has done the seemingly impossible - made an integrated graphics part that does not immediately draw ridicule from all sides. It is actually good. The main trick AMD pulled out of the hat is to change the specs on what an IGP (Integrated Graphics Part) is. AMD decided to take a full GPU and put it on the chipset, so what you have is a full Radeon HD24xx (RV620) on board, video acceleration, 3D and all."
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nice
by superstoned (3.2) on Sat 8th Mar 2008 01:05 UTC
superstoned
Member since:
2005-07-07
Fans: 3

That's one seriously good looking chipset. Nice job by AMD/ATI... Such stuff might put 'em back on the chart. My next PC won't be a powerhouse anyway, I prefer low-noise these days. So AMD might still be a choice!

Drivers?
by kokara4a (1.14) on Sat 8th Mar 2008 02:20 UTC
kokara4a
Member since:
2005-09-16
Fans: 0

What about x.org drivers? Particularly for x86_64. At work I'm runing 64 bit Ubuntu 7.10 with an ATI HD2300 with the vesa driver because I cannot make any other driver to work. I tried installing the official ATI drivers which screwed the system so badly that it wouldn't even boot!!! radeonhd doesn't work either. AMD/ATI should get serious with open source and not only publish specifications (thanks for those, anyway) but hire people to work on the drivers. Right now, the only reasonable choice is Intel with its integrated graphics. Obviously, I'm not a gamer, but compiz works out of the box and so does Google Earth albeit not very smooth.

Once there are decent drivers for the 780G I am certainly getting one with a Phenom to plug in it. AMD, do you hear me?

RE: Drivers?
by VistaUser (2.64) on Sat 8th Mar 2008 13:44 UTC in reply to "Drivers?"
VistaUser Member since:
2008-03-08
Fans: 0

If you use Ubuntu, you should be aware of its update policies. In short, a lot has changed in the drivers scene since October (or wheneever their feature freeze happened), but Ubuntu has a policy of not updating software to higher versions. Sometimes that will work in your favour, sometimes it will not.

Currently you have two FLOSS options:

Try either an updated version of the RadeonHD driver or an updated version of the radeon driver. Neither are 3d capable yet (which may come pretty soon in the Radeon driver), but atleast 2d is working pretty well for most people.

RE[2]: Drivers?
by kokara4a (1.14) on Sun 9th Mar 2008 08:00 UTC in reply to "RE: Drivers?"
kokara4a Member since:
2005-09-16
Fans: 0

Thanks, I was not aware of that. I'd be happy with just better 2D support, because currently switching to text console and back screws up X in a pretty psychedelic way.

But the question still remains about 780G drivers. Will any bleeding edge driver be usable on 780G today?

Edited 2008-03-09 08:03 UTC

RE[3]: Drivers?
by anduril (1.96) on Sun 9th Mar 2008 21:19 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: Drivers?"
anduril Member since:
2005-11-11
Fans: 0

As of right now AMD isn't listing support for the 780G in its Linux drivers. They're normally a release behind so I'd expect some sort of support in the next (8.4) release

I await the mobile version of this.
by Anon (3.92) on Sat 8th Mar 2008 05:07 UTC
Anon
Member since:
2006-01-02
Fans: 0

Great work from AMD, and it'll be even better when they roll out the Mobile (Puma?) version of this gear.

I'm holding off my acquisition of a laptop till I can get my hands on a AMD64 Puma based one.

John Blink Member since:
2005-10-11
Fans: 1

I haven't heared about PUMA. What is the key exciting feature for you?

Anon Member since:
2006-01-02
Fans: 0

The fact it'll be the mobile version of this exact platform. Potentially means decent performing cheaper laptops, and AMD64bit ones at that.

John Blink Member since:
2005-10-11
Fans: 1

I would be keen to find out about battery life, when products emerge.

After reading the article it sounds great.

v there you go...
by mmu_man (3.08) on Sat 8th Mar 2008 14:51 UTC
RE: there you go...
by quarkvanlepton (7) on Sat 8th Mar 2008 15:55 UTC in reply to "there you go..."
quarkvanlepton Member since:
2008-03-08
Fans: 0

bigger fans again.


Dear Mr. mmu man, please, read the article before you comment on it!

One of the most important questions on anyones mind lately is power, and the flip side of that, noise. The 780G does very well here, it is 100 per cent passively cooled so it is totally quiet, only HD noise and case fans to disturb your pe ace.

Decent upgrade
by anduril (1.96) on Sun 9th Mar 2008 21:21 UTC
anduril
Member since:
2005-11-11
Fans: 0

Seems like a nice step up from the 690G chipset that I'm currently using. Wonder if they'll unlock any future features with driver and BIOS updates like they did with the 690 ;)

A good review
by irbis (2.88) on Mon 10th Mar 2008 09:38 UTC
irbis
Member since:
2005-07-08
Fans: 0

Silent PC Review has a detailed review of the chipset here:

AMD 780G: Best Ever Integrated Mainstream Chipset?
http://www.silentpcreview.com/article807-page1.html

It is tested as a part of the Gigabyte GA-MA78GM-S2H motherboard.

Comment by Vanger
by Vanger (1.55) on Tue 11th Mar 2008 14:12 UTC
Vanger
Member since:
2007-11-28
Fans: 0

Cool. My brother played Oblivion on 6100 integrated back in 2006. I should tell him, that he was dumb and that he should've been waiting for 780G. So much for the title..

Actually 6100/6150/7050 (all the same crap) are the only decent IGPs on market till today. If 780G will be widespread and will have good Linux drivers support - why not.