News

November 26, 2008

Thomson graphics card runs Toshiba SpursEngine

High-end graphics aimed at Blu-Ray users

Martyn Williams

The second graphics card based on Toshiba's SpursEngine chip, Thomson's Firecoder Blu, went on sale in Japan this week.

The SpursEngine is derived from the Cell Broadband Engine microprocessor that runs the PlayStation 3 (PS3) but includes four graphics processing cores, which is half as many as the Cell, and doesn't have an on-chip controller CPU. The chip contains a hardware encoder and decoder for MPEG2 and MPEG4 AVC/H.264 video and is designed to be used as a co-processor in a PC for handling of calculation-intensive work such a real-time high-definition graphics processing.

Thomson's new graphics card makes use of these characteristics and is aimed at people watching, editing or burning high-definition movies with Blu-ray Disc. The company says it can transcode AVCHD, a common format used in consumer high-def camcorders, to and from MPEG2 at up to 5 times faster than real time.

It works with Windows XP and Vista systems and costs ¥52,290 (£350). It will be available in the U.S. in December and will cost $599 (£390).

Last week Taiwan's Leadtek launched a board based on the SpursEngine. The WinFast PxVC1100 costs ¥29,800.

Leadtek to launch PS3 graphics chip for PCs

<<newer story | back to index | older story>>

What is this?

Subscribe to PC Advisor now and claim your FREE gift

Keep up to date by adding PC Advisor News to your iGoogle home page or Google Reader


Google


Recent reviews

Reviews index


Latest reader comments

Latest reader comments


Top news

News index


Latest blog entries

Blogs index


 Our RSS feeds

Sponsored Content

  • Take the internet to new places with the Nokia N800
    Communicate how you want to, where you want to with instant messaging, email and internet calling. View movies, browse the internet wirelessly and watch TV on the high-resolution screen and listen through high-quality stereo speakers with headphone jack.
    Buy now