Skip to main content

Nvidia claims mobile chip is four times faster than integrated Intel graphics

1188449 autosave v1 nvidiamx150 01
Nvidia
Nvidia has made some ambitious claims about the performance of its upcoming mobile graphics chip, the MX150 and shown off specifications to back them up. It is said to offer much-improved performance efficiency over the Maxwell-based 940MX from the previous graphics generation and claims that the performance can be as much as four times that of integrated Intel graphics.

Although graphics cards and chips are often talked about in the same conversation as high-end gaming, they do have their uses elsewhere. For non-gamers, having a dedicated graphics chip can make a big difference in the time it takes to edit photos, or in remastering video. Those content creators are the ones Nvidia is targeting with its new release, claiming that the MX150 is a must-have for their next upgrade.

In terms of specifications, this chip sports 384 CUDA cores, according to Tech Powerup, which while the same as the 940MX, come in a 16nm package. That’s a full 12nm smaller than the older, 900-series generation. It has also partnered up exclusively with GDDR5 memory, whereas its predecessor often shipped out with slower GDDR3 instead.

Get your weekly teardown of the tech behind PC gaming
Check your inbox!

As reported, clock speeds should be higher too, though the specifics of that will likely depend on the device the chip is used in and how strong its cooling solution is.

Those architectural changes should lead to big gains in performance and efficiency. While it’s always important to take manufacturer claims of real-world performance with a pinch of salt, the MX150 is said to have three times the performance per watt, when compared with the 940MX. Photo editing is also said to be up to 2.5 times as fast as Intel’s HD520 onboard graphics chip.

Video remastering sees a 33-percent improvement over the 940MX, too, with operation at four times the speed of the HD520. Overall, this is said to give the MX150 four times the performance of that same Intel chip, and provide comparable improvements over the HD620.

The added efficiency from the new chip design should give hardware manufacturers many more options when it comes to the power draw and performance they offer. If they so choose, they could utilize the added efficiency to provide stronger battery life and reduced temperature output for smaller, lighter devices, alongside the more powerful alternatives.

Laptops from the likes of Acer, Asus, Clevo, HP, and MSI fitted with the MX150 chip, should start shipping out in June.

Updated 05/29/2017 by Jon Martindale – Improved image gallery.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is the Evergreen Coordinator for Computing, overseeing a team of writers addressing all the latest how to…
Nvidia Ada Lovelace: Next-gen graphics could be 71% more powerful than RTX 3080
nvidia rtx 3080 review 01

Even as gamers are still waiting to get their hands on Nvidia's latest RTX graphics cards following the recent launch of the RTX 3000 series powered by the Ampere architecture, it appears that the company may already be working on a next-generation GPU that -- if leaks are to be believed -- may be significantly more powerful. Though we don't know what the next GeForce card will be called (it will likely be part of the RTX 4000 series) the architecture is believed to be code-named Ada Lovelace.

Ada Lovelace is described to be capable of a whopping 64 TFLOPs of power, which would give Nvidia the performance lead. That's nearly twice the performance of the current RTX 3080 flagship, which comes in at 34 TFLOPs, and more than five times the performance of Microsoft's Xbox Series X.
What is Nvidia Ada Lovelace?

Read more
A dangerous new jailbreak for AI chatbots was just discovered
the side of a Microsoft building

Microsoft has released more details about a troubling new generative AI jailbreak technique it has discovered, called "Skeleton Key." Using this prompt injection method, malicious users can effectively bypass a chatbot's safety guardrails, the security features that keeps ChatGPT from going full Taye.

Skeleton Key is an example of a prompt injection or prompt engineering attack. It's a multi-turn strategy designed to essentially convince an AI model to ignore its ingrained safety guardrails, "[causing] the system to violate its operators’ policies, make decisions unduly influenced by a user, or execute malicious instructions," Mark Russinovich, CTO of Microsoft Azure, wrote in the announcement.

Read more