Fall Comdex '98 Coverage
by Anand Lal Shimpi on November 21, 1998 11:19 AM EST- Posted in
- Trade Shows
One of the largest displays of motherboards in the entire Sands convention center was held by none other than the chipset giant themselves, VIA Technologies. The manufacturer of the Socket-7 AGP Chipset, the MVP3, displayed their latest concoction, the MVP4. The Mobile VIA Apollo IV Chipset is a highly integrated solution ready for the demands for the upcoming computing year. What makes the MVP4 any different from the MVP3? |
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Performance-wise, the two are equal in terms of normal business applications and even high end applications. The MVP4 is nothing more than a MVP3 at heart. Where the two differ is in how big of a heart goes into the MVP4 versus the MVP3. While the MVP3 is basically a controller chip for the motherboard, the MVP4 contains an integrated AGP graphics solution, integrated sound, as well as integrated hardware monitoring and hardware DVD decoding. |
The integrated 2D/3D graphics solution isn't your high end Riva TNT or Voodoo2 accelerator, rather a proprietary design produced by Trident specifically for the purpose of operating in such an environment. While the MVP4 isn't intended to be a high end 2D/3D graphics solution, it doesn't give you the lackluster graphics performance you may be expecting. VIA assured AnandTech that the performance would be "decent" and that it would be a higher end solution than the bare minimum requirements for a 2D/3D accelerator. Whether that has any merit or not is up to you all to decide, however going on VIA's word, the MVP4 should provide most users with the ability to construct a nice $700 system with AC97 compliance among other things.
The hardware DVD decoding is another benefit the MVP4 offers in addition to its highly integrated nature and inherently low cost. As if that weren't enough, it is possible for Fast Ethernet to be integrated into the chipset as well, sort of leaning towards the all-in-one PC design that the computer industry has been slowly but surely moving towards in the past few years. Although hard core gamers won't drop their more expensive PC's in favor of a MVP4 based system, a second system built around a MVP4 motherboard wouldn't be too bad of an idea.
Contrary to popular belief, VIA seems to be quite on track with the MVP4, at Comdex AnandTech was able to see a reference board running an AMD K6-2 without any problems at all. Companies such as FIC and AOpen already have MVP4 based products in the works, and in the future a number of manufacturers will join the two with their MVP4 solutions. |
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