The Notebook Review forums were hosted by TechTarget, who shut down them down on January 31, 2022. This static read-only archive was pulled by NBR forum users between January 20 and January 31, 2022, in an effort to make sure that the valuable technical information that had been posted on the forums is preserved. For current discussions, many NBR forum users moved over to NotebookTalk.net after the shutdown.
Problems? See this thread at archive.org.
 Next page →

    XoticPC to offer Pre-Order of GTX 280M

    Discussion in 'Sager and Clevo' started by emike09, Mar 4, 2009.

  1. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    I just received word from Justin at XoticPC that they are accepting pre-orders starting tomorrow (Mar 5th) for the upcoming nVidia GTX 280 Mobile GPU.

    Sager has confirmed that the NP5796/5797 systems will accept the card. It is fairly safe to assume the D901C will also support the card, although nothing has been confirmed as of yet. No price on the card as of now, we can only hope it will be a little cheaper than the 9800M GTX due to its 55nm fab.

    A few stats about the card:
    G92b core - built on 55nm fab @ 585Mhz
    128-Shaders @ 1463MHz
    1GB DDR3 @ 950MHz
    61GB Memory Bandwidth
    562 GFlops
    MXM 3b
    75w Power Usage
    nVidia claim of 50% faster than the 9800M GTX

    I plan on getting one of these, so anybody who wants a used cheap 9800M GTX, let me know!
     
  2. makaveli72

    makaveli72 Eat.My.Shorts

    Reputations:
    1,235
    Messages:
    2,108
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    What about Pre-Orders for the D900F fully customizable? :D :p
     
  3. kaltmond

    kaltmond Clepple

    Reputations:
    699
    Messages:
    1,454
    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    56
    Well without BIOS support it's hardly to run new cards in for example 5793. I tried already the 9800M GTX in M570RU and it says unknown MXM Module....But still post is possible. :)
     
  4. whizzo

    whizzo Notebook Prophet

    Reputations:
    769
    Messages:
    5,851
    Likes Received:
    2
    Trophy Points:
    206
    I, uhh, doubt that :)
     
  5. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    Hey I only said we can hope. With ATI coming out with some insane cards that finally are powerful enough to compete with nVidia, and the cards being cheaper to make, the lowering economy...who knows! Its possible.
     
  6. Eivind

    Eivind Notebook Evangelist

    Reputations:
    87
    Messages:
    668
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    30
    The GTX 280M are 160USD more expensive than the 9800M GTX here in Norway. Im not sure if you can trust it that much.
     
  7. GanGstaOne

    GanGstaOne Notebook Evangelist

    Reputations:
    182
    Messages:
    501
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    30
    well if Clevo release the new nVIDIA cards for D901C will be WOW
     
  8. Blacky

    Blacky Notebook Prophet

    Reputations:
    2,044
    Messages:
    5,346
    Likes Received:
    1,034
    Trophy Points:
    331
    I am can't wait for pricing and benches from you emike09. If the pricing is right I just might upgrade as well.
     
  9. Citizen86

    Citizen86 Notebook User Guy

    Reputations:
    203
    Messages:
    1,188
    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    56
    I'm be skeptical of 50% faster with only 128 shaders. I haven't exactly kept up with these new ones, but are they based on new tech, or is it the same tech as 9800m series?
     
  10. Quicklite

    Quicklite Notebook Deity

    Reputations:
    158
    Messages:
    1,576
    Likes Received:
    16
    Trophy Points:
    56
    So Ati moved two cards into 40m, and NV's only just got down to 55nm; shall have to wait and see how either performs.
     
  11. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    Well this card is essentially a 9800 GTX+ Desktop card with a lot lower clocks and 1GB of memory. I'm not sure what the core is clocked at, but with a little overclock of the shaders and core, you would match or beat the performance of the 8800 GTS G92 desktop card without breaking a sweat.

    It is based on a die shrink of the 9800m series. Essentially the same, but manufactured in 55nm, meaning lower power, lower heat, and higher stability.
     
  12. Donald@Paladin44

    Donald@Paladin44 Retired

    Reputations:
    13,984
    Messages:
    9,257
    Likes Received:
    5,842
    Trophy Points:
    681
    Well, you won't be disappointed about the price because the GeForce GTX 280M w/1GB DDR3 will be more attractive than the current pricing.

    The only disappointment will be the wait until end of March for them to begin shipping.
     
  13. 5482741

    5482741 5482741

    Reputations:
    712
    Messages:
    1,530
    Likes Received:
    17
    Trophy Points:
    56
    Any info as to when the 260M will be available?
     
  14. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    Thanks for the encouraging work, Donald! This is exciting, things were getting a bit slow around these forums till CeBit and new GPUs were announced.
     
  15. ichime

    ichime Notebook Elder

    Reputations:
    2,420
    Messages:
    2,676
    Likes Received:
    3
    Trophy Points:
    56
    It's semantics; slides say up to 50% faster than the 9800M GTX, so it could be comparing a 9800M GTX running on battery mode, lol
     
  16. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    Well I recall seeing somewhere a benchmark in 3DMark06 running with the X9100. It got 11.5k i recall, which is pretty impressive for a stock card. The 9800M GTX gets 9500 points with the same CPU. A 50% increase in performance would put the card at 14250 points, and I have high doubts that we will really see performance like that without some powerful overclocking.
     
  17. ichime

    ichime Notebook Elder

    Reputations:
    2,420
    Messages:
    2,676
    Likes Received:
    3
    Trophy Points:
    56
    Yep, around 11.7k with a GTX 280M + x9100 here.
     
  18. Nirvana

    Nirvana Notebook Prophet

    Reputations:
    2,200
    Messages:
    5,426
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    0
    If the score from notebookcheck is accurate I am really disappointed.
     
  19. Justin@XoticPC

    Justin@XoticPC Company Representative

    Reputations:
    4,191
    Messages:
    3,307
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    105
    Unfortunately there is no info on the GTX 280M other then the M570TU at this time. Although it is not confirmed, the GTX280M is supposed to be a drop in for the 5796/5797.
     
  20. link1313

    link1313 Notebook Virtuoso

    Reputations:
    596
    Messages:
    3,470
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    105
    Yes it is =/
     
  21. fallingcat

    fallingcat Notebook Consultant

    Reputations:
    12
    Messages:
    281
    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    31

    Will this card work in them M17 setup ???

    :confused:
     
  22. link1313

    link1313 Notebook Virtuoso

    Reputations:
    596
    Messages:
    3,470
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    105
    Nah I don't mean price-wise. Performance wise the HD4850 is currently trading blows with the 9800M GTX depending on the game. The HD4870 is clocked higher so depending on how much an improvement the HD4870 is compared to the HD4850 it could possibly compete with the GTX280. I also think if ATi puts GDDR5 in the HD4870 like it claims it can than it would definitely be a lot better than the GTX280. Currently there is no laptop with a HD4870 GDDR5 though.
     
  23. Blacky

    Blacky Notebook Prophet

    Reputations:
    2,044
    Messages:
    5,346
    Likes Received:
    1,034
    Trophy Points:
    331
    Part of the reason I want to see the new 280M vs the 4870 in benchmarks and all. Roamer has it the 570 will also have the ATI as an option.
    link1313: overclocking is an issue. This is because I've seen the benchmarks and in game performance and my 9800M GTX with the current clocks is just slightly worse than the 4870 (5% at most). We need to see how the 4870 overlclocks as well.
     
  24. Citizen86

    Citizen86 Notebook User Guy

    Reputations:
    203
    Messages:
    1,188
    Likes Received:
    1
    Trophy Points:
    56
    You talk an awful lot....
     
  25. link1313

    link1313 Notebook Virtuoso

    Reputations:
    596
    Messages:
    3,470
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    105
    lol, your that guy that was banned like 2 days ago. you created a new account, reported.

    Also stop making stuff up thats why I don't bother dealing with you anyone knows this isn't true. I only deal with the facts, when you respond with lies it makes it impossible to create a valid argument.
     
  26. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    Notice the words Justin uses "Unfortunately there is no info on the GTX 280M other then the M570TU at this time. Although it is not confirmed, the GTX280M is supposed to be a drop in for the 5796/5797."

    Very little has officially been announced. If the 9800M GTX works in the D901C / D900F, then more than likely the GTX 280M will also. Nothing has been confirmed as of yet.
     
  27. sgogeta4

    sgogeta4 Notebook Nobel Laureate

    Reputations:
    2,389
    Messages:
    10,552
    Likes Received:
    7
    Trophy Points:
    456
    Maybe because the GDDR5 version hasn't been released yet... and I don't think anyone ever said that ATI performed better than the desktop version. Though the nVidia market share thing is far from being true...
     
  28. link1313

    link1313 Notebook Virtuoso

    Reputations:
    596
    Messages:
    3,470
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    105
    id delete your post or you'll get banned again.
     
  29. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    Probably because the card has not been released yet, and they have not finished development for the other systems. Hard to say. You can bet that the D900F and M898NU will support the GTX280M.

    Who needs to delete their post?
     
  30. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    Well you should probably discuss SLi in the D900F in a thread of its own, as it would be off topic here.
     
  31. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    Anyways...

    The GTX 280M looks to be a fine card. Its what the 9800M GTX should have been, but that aside, is a decent upgrade compared to the 8800M GTX and the 9800M GTX. We all know that the massive, high end desktop GTX wouldn't make it to mobile till it hit 40nm; more than likely that will be our next upgrade in the GTX 300 market Q4 2009.
     
  32. Crave8891

    Crave8891 Notebook Guru

    Reputations:
    8
    Messages:
    62
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    15
    No the Gtx 280 architecture will never come to the Notebook market.
    The Gtx 2XX arch is too hot and power hungry for notebooks at 55nm
    Nvidia tried to make a mobile 280 processor with the 40nm but It was a disaster.

    The 2XX arch is designed for the 65nm process and I've heard it was a disaster when they tried to fit it on a 40nm chip.
    This is why Intel does a die shrink and then redesigns the architecture, you can't just keep shrinking an architecture.
    The next mobile arch will be the 3xx architecture which will either be a redesign of the 2xx arch for 40nm or an entirely new arch designed for the 40nm process.
     
  33. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    You are right. More than likely the GTX 3xx will be a completely new chip instead of using the aged G92 core. You have any article references on nVidias 40nm attempts? Would be curious to read more into it.
     
  34. Crave8891

    Crave8891 Notebook Guru

    Reputations:
    8
    Messages:
    62
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    15
  35. Blacky

    Blacky Notebook Prophet

    Reputations:
    2,044
    Messages:
    5,346
    Likes Received:
    1,034
    Trophy Points:
    331
    Yeah, I agree on that, for the price we paied for the 9800M GTX, Nvidia should let us upgrade for free to the new 280M :D. Or maybe just paying a small difference ($ 50) :D.
     
  36. Bluemercury

    Bluemercury Notebook Evangelist

    Reputations:
    4
    Messages:
    305
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    30
    Does the GTX m280 used the mxm type compatible with the m860tu??
     
  37. Crave8891

    Crave8891 Notebook Guru

    Reputations:
    8
    Messages:
    62
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    15
    I believe it is mxm4 and version 2.1 and not 3.0 so I believe yes.
    Doesnt mean the 860TU will be able to use it thou.
     
  38. link1313

    link1313 Notebook Virtuoso

    Reputations:
    596
    Messages:
    3,470
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    105
    If Clevo said the 9800M GTX was too much heat for the M860TU I am not sure if they would support it. Its pretty clear from current temperatures the M860TU is well equipped to handle it though. Its up to Clevo though :(
     
  39. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
  40. Bluemercury

    Bluemercury Notebook Evangelist

    Reputations:
    4
    Messages:
    305
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    30
  41. Donald@Paladin44

    Donald@Paladin44 Retired

    Reputations:
    13,984
    Messages:
    9,257
    Likes Received:
    5,842
    Trophy Points:
    681
    No, it will not be backwards compatible
     
  42. Crave8891

    Crave8891 Notebook Guru

    Reputations:
    8
    Messages:
    62
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    15
    Ahh so the 260/280M are version 3.0?
    that would require a mobo upgrade then

    Is it just the 280M that is 3.0 or both the 280 and 260m
     
  43. Eivind

    Eivind Notebook Evangelist

    Reputations:
    87
    Messages:
    668
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    30
    Are you saying the M860 cant use the GTX 260M? Because our reseller have confirmed with Clevo it will work and the GTX 260M drivers for M860 are on Clevos site.
     
  44. emike09

    emike09 Overclocking Champion

    Reputations:
    652
    Messages:
    1,840
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    The GTX260/280M both use MXM 3, just as the M860 and NP579x use MXM 3. However, I do not think the M860 will support the GTX 280M
     
  45. Crave8891

    Crave8891 Notebook Guru

    Reputations:
    8
    Messages:
    62
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    15
    Mxm 3 and Mxm Revison 3 are two different things I believe.
    Mxm 3 is the slot type and the revision is the mxm version they are on.
    I had thought the M860TU was revision 2.1 but I could be wrong

    Qouted from MxmUpgrade.com

    November 19th 2008

    And no, we don't mean Type III, we mean version three. To date, we've seen 1.0, 1.3, 2.0 and 2.1 cards in the field. It didn't seem to make too much difference. Some software changes, support for the display port format, an additional mechanical format... We've never been able to pin incompatibility issues to MXM revisions even though there are probably some cases buried in the mountain of 'no go' upgrade attempts.

    MXM 3.0 is different. There will be no back or forward compatibility. The reason lies in the redefined connector, which is completely incompatible on both the electric and mechanical front. So, don't even think about 'hacking' a 3.0 module to fit in an older MXM notebook. Simply will never work. Some more info...

    Features:

    - Only two mechanical formats
    -> Type 'A' 82x70mm, 35W TDP
    -> Type 'B' 82x105mm, 75W TDP
    - Up to 4 dual mode Display Ports
    - 16 lanes PCIe Generation 2
    - Legacy VGA support

    There is actually no pressing reason in this feature set to move to 3.0 It's obviously better 'future proof' so for new designs it will most likely be the choice of preference but perhaps evolutions of existing designs will stick to 2.x for some time..

    Compatibility

    As said: forget about backward compatibility. Type A will fit in both Type A and Type B notebooks, which seems logical. Type B modules will be restricted to Type B notebooks, again as expected. The good thing is that they clearly took a lesson from previous experiences, which means height restrictions on the card have been clearly defined, a 'generic' thermal interface was made, a generic bracket was defined,... Odd thing is that manufacturers are explicitly allowed to stray from the board outline as long as the notebook will accept 'generic' cards! While this makes sense from an OEM point of view, it is unfortunate for end users. If vendor A makes a 3.0 card and adds some height and board area there is a very decent chance it will not fit in vendor B's notebook. This is actually very reminiscent to what we've seen with Arima cards for the board size and a horde of height restriction differences.

    On the electrical side, things are comparable. While most signals are very well defined, there are a few OEM reserved pins that can be used at the OEM's discretion. They can add additional power rails, features, or a control mechanism to prevent the insertion of non-native cards. There is no guarantee that such a OEM module will operate in another 3.0 notebook. Or blow up, for all we know. It is clearly stated that 'generic' 3.0 modules will not use these pins but even then it remains to be seen if OEM's will make these pins mandatory for correct operation or not. If they want to be MXM 3.0 compliant, a generic module must operate without the additional pins.

    On the software side, things are once again the comparable. A normal graphics card would always 'carry' it's own vBios onboard in a small EEPROM. In this case, the spec mentions explicitly the option to integrate it in the system bios. To be MXM 3.0 compliant, the system should be able to accept 'generic' modules with an onboard vBios. Besides that, a MXM 3.0 software spec was defined. This software structure will tell the card what display interfaces the system requires and will tell a bit about thermal limitations of the system etc. Comparable efforts where done in the past but we suspect that non-implementation, free interpretation or just bug infested implementations have been at the base of some upgrade failures in the past. We seem to see a strong push to have a uniform implementation this time.

    All in all, generic modules should always work in MXM v3.0 compliant platforms but manufacturers are at liberty to add some off their own flavor to their own cards, even if they make the system v3.0 compliant. So the big question is whether the 'MXM v3.0 compliant' sticker is a big enough carrot to lure OEM's to make life easier for end users (or service centers, system integrators, boutique stores,...). The second big issue is that all graphic card manufacturers that produced 'generic' MXM cards without a specific target have stopped doing so. All the cards we ever sold were designed for a specific notebook. So even if all future notebooks are 'MXM v3.0 compliant' that may remain nothing but a nice catchphrase if no MXM v3.0 compliant cards are offered on the open market...


    To be continued for sure!


    After rereading this I believe that M860TU's will need a Mobo Upgrade to use the new 260M's as the mobo in M860Tu's currently has mxm 2.1 and as stated 3.0 is not backwards compatible. My guess that since the mobo will be upgraded it will not just be the Mxm slot that is changed they might add support for the 1333mhz ddr 3 laptop mem out currently along with other changes mayhaps quad core :3?

    I do not know if the ATI cards are MXM 3.0 and I cannot speculate on the 5790's
     
  46. Bluemercury

    Bluemercury Notebook Evangelist

    Reputations:
    4
    Messages:
    305
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    30
    I guess i do the best to not wait then???i already payed for a 8800m Gtx but due to compatibility problems the store ordered other from clevo, but i can still wait for the m260 assuming that it wont require a new heatsink......and this might make wait two month....
     
  47. Nirvana

    Nirvana Notebook Prophet

    Reputations:
    2,200
    Messages:
    5,426
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    0
    Paid

    (10 char)
     
  48. NoSpinZone

    NoSpinZone Notebook Consultant

    Reputations:
    102
    Messages:
    144
    Likes Received:
    3
    Trophy Points:
    31
    If we are all going to be correcting everyone's spelling, and grammar, we will be doubling the posts in this forum! :D
     
  49. maksin01

    maksin01 Notebook Deity

    Reputations:
    446
    Messages:
    1,203
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    I'm guessing my NP5790 (upgraded with a 8800M GTX) won't be able to upgrade to the GTX 280M, correct? :rolleyes:
     
  50. Charr

    Charr Notebook Deity

    Reputations:
    415
    Messages:
    1,564
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    55
    How much are these cards going to cost?
     
 Next page →