GeForce 6100 Chipset

nForce 3 and nForce 4 are single chip solutions. With the GeForce 6100 series, NVIDIA returns to a two-chip solution.


The GeForce6100/6150 provide integrated graphics support and PCI Express. The 430/410 MCP, NVIDIA's name for their Southbridges, provides the rest of the peripheral support including integrated LAN, IDE, SATA, USB and support for both high-definition Azalia and AC'97 audio.



Motherboards and systems are expected in early October from a wide cross-section of manufacturers. Two of the earliest boards are expected from Asus . . .


. . . and Gigabyte..


The GeForce 6100 Family Our Take
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  • Johnmcl7 - Wednesday, September 21, 2005 - link

    That was exactly what I was thinking, as far as I'm aware the Xpress200 integrated graphics card is only a two pipeline solution.

    John
  • toyota - Wednesday, September 21, 2005 - link

    are we the only ones that noticed?? i wish they would correct this then. anandtech made the 2 pipeline nvidia sound inferior to the ati. everthing that i have seen says 2 pipelines for the ati too. i would like a correction or explanation.
  • Johnmcl7 - Wednesday, September 21, 2005 - link

    Looks like it, even though we seem to be stuck in bold now!

    It's a fairly large mistake, as it means the nvidia chip is likely to offer similar performance or better, rather significantly inferior.

    John
  • TrogdorJW - Wednesday, September 21, 2005 - link

    Wow... we need to add editing to posts. At least for some of the admins/writers....

    Here, let's try to kill the bold.

    Did it work? (I think there were two stray bold tags.)
  • TrogdorJW - Wednesday, September 21, 2005 - link

    Hooray! :D
  • xsilver - Tuesday, September 20, 2005 - link

    To those naysayers thinking that nvidia is going to stumble under the 90nm process, it doesnt look good. Granted this chip is much simpler than the r520

    Or could it be the reason it is only 2 pixel pipelines due to yield issues with the low nm? interesting....
  • JarredWalton - Tuesday, September 20, 2005 - link

    I think there's about 50 to 100 million transistors in the typical chipset already, so adding ~25 million for a two pixel pipeline GPU isn't insignificant. (Just guessing on numbers - I could be off.) Certainly, we're not talking 300 million transistors like G70 or R520, but chipsets have a lot of other stuff without adding a GPU core. 475 MHz on the GPU sounds at least somewhat promising.
  • tfranzese - Wednesday, September 21, 2005 - link

    But, don't forget they split it into a two chip solution now. This isn't simply adding the transistor counts of the GPU to the previous chipset's.
  • JarredWalton - Thursday, September 22, 2005 - link

    True. Of course, GPU manufacturers want to protect their discrete graphics markets. You also won't get discrete GPU performance without adding on-board (or on-chip) RAM, as the shared memory doesn't offer nearly enough bandwidth for a high-powered GPU. If ATI or NVIDIA could develop a board with high-powered IGP - like say 8 pipelines or more - but that chipset cost $100 instead of $50, board manufacturers and end users wouldn't buy it. They try to add as much power to the IGP as possible without increasing costs much, which leads to things like shared RAM and 2 pipelines. At least, that's my take.
  • Doormat - Tuesday, September 20, 2005 - link

    NEXT. No HDMI out = no hi-def video replay under windows Vista. Good thinkin' nVidia.

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