SpursEngine?
So it'll massively underperform and look enviously at the PC on your other desk?
It's alright - it's warm out so I didn't bring a coat...
Toshiba has pledged to begin selling notebooks equipped with its oddly named SpursEngine graphics chip this year. SpursEngine is based on the technology that powers the PlayStation 3's Cell processor. Outlining its post HD DVD growth strategy this week, Toshiba management said it will put its SpursEngine SE1000 chip into …
would ever want 14 images on one screen? Who would want many more than 4 for that matter? This seems to me to be one of the more blatant "here is our solution to a problem we haven't invented", pitches of the past few years.
"For only a few hundred pounds extra, you too can have a multitude of utterly fecking useless features we will ensure you believe you need."
Hey, at least it could still win something - the PC on the other desk will just look good for a while, garner fantastic, gushing reviews, then break down completely without actually achieving anything and be broken into constituent parts and given away to other, better PCs :P
Seems to me that if these upscaling algorithms get any better it'll completely obviate the need for Blu Ray - why bother encoding in HD when you can encode in SD and upscale it for the same result?
Actually to take that to it's logical conclusion - an upscaling algorithm of infinite power should be able to take a 1 x 1 pixel encoded image and upscale it to perfect hidef or beyond, meaning that we can store millions of hours of HD film on a 1MB memorystick.
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"Seems to me that if these upscaling algorithms get any better it'll completely obviate the need for Blu Ray - why bother encoding in HD when you can encode in SD and upscale it for the same result?"
BUT upscaling is only stretching and sharpening up the image. you dont get any added clarity from upscaling. the ps3 does upscale bloody well but it cannot compare to a 1080p original
"Actually to take that to it's logical conclusion - an upscaling algorithm of infinite power should be able to take a 1 x 1 pixel encoded image and upscale it to perfect hidef or beyond, meaning that we can store millions of hours of HD film on a 1MB memorystick." - wtf? simply not even feasibly possible. you are asking a chip to 'best guess' what the hell is happening.its not gonna happen.
Make it so the laptop could play ps3 games, mobile PS3 with a dual boot from either a game disk, or hdd to windoze/linux (switch flick or button press, whatever the luddite needs)
that would be THE seller, its not like consoles havent been integrated into pc's before. wasnt it Amstrad who had a megadrive port in some desktops?
Who here does not lament the demise of the PowerPC architecture from the desktop?
Why oh why did IBM abandon ppc64?
It would seem (at least for the moment) we're stuck with IA-32/AMD64/EM64T for the forseable future, at least on desktops.
If there's anyway to end this domination now let's do it. I still live in somewhat despondent hope that one day there will be multicore ppc64's (or even cell derivatives) cheaply available for desktops. BSD/Linux whatever.
And no, the ps3 at the moment just ain't good enough.
Are you sure Daniel was joking? Surely upscaling from one pixel to a whole movie is the basis of Jean-Claude van Damme's cinematic acting career? Taking that to it's logical conclusion you could probably upscale a sub-pixel to encompass the multi-layered and complex thespian talents displayed in Ms Hilton's screen appearances.
You know what? I think I'd rather just sit here watching the sub-pixel for an hour and a half. Or maybe something less painful still like stapling my feet to the floor with a nail gun.