This story seems to have originated at DigiTimes.
Their latest update is:
"Nvidia said to be quitting chipset business; company denies claims"
DT: <http://www.digitimes.com/mobos/a20080801VL203.html>
Note: goes to subscription after a few days.
They are unimpressed with the "confirmation by official denial".
The XbitLabs article was interesting. I was surprised to
learn that SLI requires motherboard support (whereas
CrossFire does not). That makes NV's fate as a high-end
graphics maker contingent on getting that support (unless
they can cleverly parallelize on a single slot, or
re-engineer to bridge the cards independently).
Other challenges facing NV include:
* G84 and G86 melt-down recall fiasco
* is NV IGP performance falling behind ATI ?
The low end of the graphics card market, and perhaps the
mid range, may be about to suffer the fate as many PC
ports that started out as cards, migrated to on-board,
and ended up in the southbridge. The AMD/ATI 790GX intro
next week may be yet another threat to NV (well, for
buyers who don't insist on Intel CPUs, anyway).
According to DT, and perhaps coincidental with the 790GX
and NV troubles, some graphics card cloners have decided
that the future of those cards is not rosy, and perhaps
they need to make IGP motherboards (they need to ask
abit.com.tw about that, rumored to be the next victim
of MB market consolidation).
"More graphics card makers to start selling IGP motherboards"
DT: <http://www.digitimes.com/mobos/a20080725PD205.html>
--
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