Under the Hood

From the specs alone you should realize that we're not talking about a very powerful gaming machine, but if you compare it to the Celeron 733 and the NV2A in the Xbox the system isn't exactly gutless. The motherboard in the ApeXtreme is produced by VIA and occupies the right side of the chassis.

On the motherboard there are three major chips - the VIA C3 processor, the CM400 North Bridge, and the VIA DeltaChrome S8 GPU. The CM400 North Bridge supports up to DDR400 memory, although Apex will determine whether they will use DDR333 or DDR400 memory in the shipping product. The CM400 also features a 200MHz FSB connection to the C3 processor, offering 1.6GB/s of bandwidth between the CPU and North Bridge.

The interesting chip is the VIA DeltaChrome S8 GPU, which is the same GPU that is beginning to ship on add-in cards within a month. The GPU is an 8 pipeline design much like the R300, and features full DirectX 9.0 pixel and vertex shader pipelines. The GPU features support for both 24-bit and 16-bit floating point values in the pixel shader pipeline. The GPU does not have support for the upcoming Pixel Shader 3.0 spec, which is a part of DirectX 9.1. The GPU on the motherboard is clocked at the same speed as the add-in cards at 300MHz, and it can be paired with anywhere from 64 - 256MB of on-board DDR memory.

The current prototype features 64MB of DDR memory on-board although the shipping version may feature more depending on the market price of memory. The memory clock on the desktop DeltaChrome S8 is 300MHz and although it could be that high on the ApeXtreme, the final decision will come closer to the shipping date. The GPU has a single 128-bit memory controller to drive up to 8 chips on the board (the motherboard itself cannot physically accommodate more than 8 chips).

The VIA CM400 chipset does actually have an integrated S3 graphics core that offers significantly less performance than the DeltaChrome S8; an integrated graphics version of the ApeXtreme may eventually be launched as more of a Home Theater PC box but Apex may want to re-evaluate how 'Xtreme' it is after that.

The ApeXtreme is at least a couple of months away from retail availability and during that time a number of the specifications may change. Apex is shooting for a MSRP of $399 for the ApeXtreme at launch.

How Xtreme are we talking? Final Words
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  • titananandtech - Saturday, January 10, 2004 - link

    I already own a GameCube and PS2 and love them. I also own a PC and it's fun too, but sometimes I wish I was playing my PC games in my living room instead of in the office. I guess I could build my own living room PC pretty easily, but this has it done already!

    I'd love to see Homeworld2 in all its glory on the big screen. But how will I control it? I wireless track ball? A wireless keyboard/mouse combo set up on a TV tray? I don't get it..
  • klah - Saturday, January 10, 2004 - link

    "Madden 2004...either 640 x 480 or 800x600 given the degree of aliasing as you can see in the image below."

    See where?

  • Cygni - Saturday, January 10, 2004 - link

    I dont think it will do too well...
  • Kishkumen - Saturday, January 10, 2004 - link

    Unfortunately, I think this is a bad idea in it's current form. The living room gaming space is already too saturated especially with Gamecubes in the $100 range. They hinted about a multimeda type appliance and I think VIA/Apex would have been better off pursuing the higher end home theater market rather than console gaming. With the popularity of HDTV increasing, I think there would be much higher demand for a good HDTV based Tivo-like personal video recorder.
  • sandorski - Saturday, January 10, 2004 - link

    I too think it's an interesting idea. If they had a customized version of WinXP, something like this could make a good retro PC Games box, as newer games will be very difficult to play on it.
  • NYHoustonman - Saturday, January 10, 2004 - link

    Very interesting idea...
  • KristopherKubicki - Saturday, January 10, 2004 - link

    Yes, it will run pre-approved PC games.

    Kristopher
  • AgaBooga - Saturday, January 10, 2004 - link

    I wonder if this will be able to run PC games or not...

    It would be very nice if you take a pc game you have and run it on a console that easily...

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