NVIDIA nForce2 Preview

by Anand Lal Shimpi on July 16, 2002 9:00 AM EST

Standardizing with SoundStorm

Dolby Digital encoding support was one of the most talked about features of the original nForce, but interestingly enough there were some motherboard manufacturers that didn’t even take advantage of the capability of the original MCP. Although every motherboard featured analog outputs not all of them shipped with digital outputs for connecting to an external Dolby Digital decoder.

We were first introduced to the nForce’s DD encoding support using NVIDIA’s reference ACR card that enabled 6-channel analog outputs as well as SPDIF audio outputs using optical connectors. NVIDIA took their reference add-in card and branded it as SoundStorm, which is what you see in the picture below.

SoundStorm is just another name for NVIDIA’s ACR card that provides all of the inputs and outputs necessary to take advantage of the APU. It is not clear whether or not motherboard manufacturers will be shipping with the rather expensive SoundStorm card, although we’d expect them to continue to use their more cost effective solutions instead.

Two new MCPs The Motherboards
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  • juanforce - Thursday, October 7, 2021 - link

    The nForce2 chipset was released by Nvidia in July 2002 as a refresh to the original nForce product offering. The nForce2 chipset was a platform for motherboards supporting AMD's Socket A CPUs along with DDR SDRAM.

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