Quote from: Dorby on May 04, 2022, 08:54:35There is also the 16 series. How much difference do you expect between MX570 and 680M? Personally, I like CUDA.
Because it fills the gap between iGPU and RTX graphics. Intel Iris XE 96EU and AMD Radeon 680M will fall behind MX570 in the majority of productivity apps that properly use GPU acceleration and other Nvidia unique features.
Quote from: RinzImpulse on May 03, 2022, 14:14:37Because it fills the gap between iGPU and RTX graphics. Intel Iris XE 96EU and AMD Radeon 680M will fall behind MX570 in the majority of productivity apps that properly use GPU acceleration and other Nvidia unique features.
Is there any point to get entry level GPU on cheap + thin and light laptops anymore other than cuda core + added heat? Those MX series doesn't even have hardware encoder/decoder, so why bother?
Quote from: Erik on May 03, 2022, 14:06:23I think so as well. Exactly because Intel's iGPU was so weak, there was space for cheap and relatively weak dGPUs. Ryzen had more powerful iGPU that left less space for such configurations (the cost of a dGPU remained the same but the benefit was smaller). Improvements in AMD's camp primarily serve to eliminate frustrations stemming from the lack of such configurations. And Intel's biggest weakness is the lack of optimization in games. AMD benefits from a GPU heritage. They can have the raw computing power but that doesn't mean they get the performance in applications.
Because AMD thin laptops are already rarely coupled with Nvidia's MX series?
Quote from: Hossam Hassan on May 03, 2022, 09:39:01Because AMD thin laptops are already rarely coupled with Nvidia's MX series?
Why you didn't mention the new ryzen 7 6800u?
Quote from: lhl on May 03, 2022, 11:09:49
[...] why not mention that the new Radeon 680M (the RDNA2 iGPU on the latest Ryzen 6000 chips), according to your own testing on NotebookCheck seems to beat the pants off both the MX450 and Iris Xe 96EU in both synthetics and gaming benchmarks?