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Intel Arc Graphics A750 + A770 Are Ready To Run On Open-Source Linux Drivers
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Originally posted by creative View Post
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I'm interested in Ryzen AM4 CPU/Intel ARC GPU compatibility. For an inexpensive workstation that supports ECC RAM (AMD AM4 ECC "support") and machine learning (Intel ARC), but no concerns about gaming; that combo seems like it might be interesting. But I have concerns about compatibility under Linux. When benchmarks are done, can a Ryzen CPU/ARC GPU combo be included?
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Ahead of the launch of the upcoming Intel Arc flagship, A770, we wanted to kick off our Arc creator coverage with an in-depth performance look at a wide-range of real-world scenarios - from encoding to rendering to photogrammetry. What does a $140 option from Intel grant you? We have many...
Some respectable results from the A380 regarding content creation.
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Originally posted by creative View PostI think the current intel GPU lineup may end up on life support just like Optane.
There's a slight difference, which is that Intel can't live without some form of graphics for their CPUs. As long as they have to continue developing iGPUs, the additional cost of dGPUs isn't as much as if it were a completely separate business. But it's not trivial, either.
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Since this is the unboxing article, I'll comment on the box & card design.
I've read that the cooler is fairly sophisticated, but I think the card isn't really much to look at. It's too buttoned-up, for my taste. I just now had another look at my old EVGA FTW card and I like how you can see the layers in the sandwich of the backplate, PCB, cooler, and cowl. But I don't use windowed cases, so what I ultimately care about the design is: noise, temperatures, and no coil-whine.
I had an old AMD HD 7870 from XFX and the quality of the cooler was utter garbage. It sounded like a lawnmower, when the fans really spun up. The EVGA card was such a revelation, being about 100 W hotter and much quieter at load. Both cards are 2-fan.
As for the box, it seems nice. Very blue.
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Originally posted by coder View PostThere's a slight difference, which is that Intel can't live without some form of graphics for their CPUs. As long as they have to continue developing iGPUs, the additional cost of dGPUs isn't as much as if it were a completely separate business. But it's not trivial, either.
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"NVIDIA is making progress on the open-source kernel driver side albeit will likely be a while before anything worthwhile is upstream...", this doesn't sound too surprising for me!
Anybody recall the lowest required kernel version required for a working Intel Arc GPU on Linux?
The article only states the kernel/mesa versions required for acceleration.
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