Nvidia: “ION Turns Netbooks into Notebooks”


May 25th, 2009 by Mark Spoonauer, LAPTOP Editor in Chief  

chipshot_ion_3qtrsmallThe wait is almost over. Nvidia’s ION graphics for netbooks will be available inside the new Lenovo S12 come August for $499. That’s only $50 more than the version that will ship with Intel’s wimpy integrated graphics. The company has three goals in mind for ION, which is paired with Intel’s Atom CPU: Enable users to play mainstream games like Spore, the Sims, and World of Warcraft; watch high-definition movies (up to 1080p on a TV); and transcode video. In other words, as senior product manager Matt Wuebbling put it when we chatted last week, “ION turns a netbook into a notebook.” Assuming Nvidia can back up these claims once the S12 becomes available, ION will be a disruptive technology in the best possible sense of the term. At a time when Intel and AMD are trying to get consumers to step up to “affordable” thin-and-light $600 to $800 notebooks powered by their ULV and NEO processors, buyers could wind up asking for cheaper portables with Atom + ION instead. Here are the highlights of our conversation with Weubbling:

  • The reason that only the ION version of the S12 has HDMI is because only it is capable of outputting 1080p video, whether it’s ripped, downloaded, or through an external Blu-ray drive. However, ION won’t help when it comes to streaming HD video online.
  • ION will allow users to benefit from graphics-accelerated video editing programs like vReveal.
  • Although Nvidia’s GeForce processors are still your best bet for the latest 3D games like Far Cry 2, you’ll be able to get “in the mid 20 frames per second” at native resolution for mainstream titles like Spore, Call of Duty 4, and World of Warcraft. “You might see hitching or a missed frame once in a while.” The native resolutoin of the S12 is 1280 x 800.
  • Wuebbling recommended this stress test for the GPU once we get our hands on the ION-enabled S12: “Play an HD or Blu-ray moview on the notebook with it connected to an external display at the same time you’re transcoding and you’ll still see perfectly flawless video.” He even said we could even surf the Web at the same time.
  • Despite the fact that ION promises 10X the graphics performance, Nvidia claims that it should deliver comparable battery life to integrated graphics. According to Lenovo, the S12 should get 6 hours of endurance, so we’ll have to wait and see if the ION version fairs as well as the Atom-only version of that notebook.

5 Responses to “Nvidia: “ION Turns Netbooks into Notebooks””

  1. Nicolas Grignon Says:

    At last! some graphical power in a netbook.

  2. Hmm Says:

    Hmm…..

    So, unless Intel works with Adobe or develops a more powerful processor that can deal with the Adobe Flash Player, we won’t be able to play things like YouTube HD even on this one???

    I wonder if Pineview can play YouTube HD…

  3. Yeah, sure sure... Says:

    AMD already had “some graphical power” in the DV2, a ready product instead of one tiny publicity photo.

    Too bad no matter how good the performance is, it was eventually shot down by Latopmag’s reviewer, who evidently doesn’t like heat generating from the more advanced GPU and battery drain, probably also from the GPU. Perhaps ION would fare better. But do remember this is the same Nvidia that gave us those lovely, combustible 8400 and 8600 graphics chips, that buyers have been cussing all this time.

  4. Fanfoot Says:

    This could be the only time you’ll ever be able to isolate the power usage of the Ion processor so clearly, given that this “netbook” will be available with or without the Ion. Please do battery life tests with both configurations of the S12 if at all possible…

  5. Mark Spoonauer Says:

    The reason why we shot down the dv2, Yeah, sure sure, wasn’t its graphics performance. It was because its battery life was mediocre and it didn’t have a full size keyboard. Not having a full size keyboard on a 12-inch system is inexcusable. And even after the BIOS update the dv2 got 3 hours of battery life, decent but still well below the endurance of an average ultraportable or netbook. Having said that, we plan on putting the ION version of the S12 head to head with the dv2 when the former debuts–and by then I’m hoping the dv2 will have been refreshed.

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