Nvidia Looking To Sell Icera In Q2 2016 By Rexly Peñaflorida Nvidia bought the company in 2011 to provide a baseband processor for the Tegra chip. The company will now buy its modems from third-party suppliers.
Nvidia Launches Tegra K1 Development Board Jetson TK1 By Kevin Parrish The Jetson TK1 has a Tegra K1 SoC already installed.
Nvidia Tegra Note 7 with LTE and HSPA+ (Update: Hands-on) By Marcus Yam The Tegra 4-powered Tegra Note 7 can now grab data when not near Wi-Fi.
GFXBench 3.0: A Fresh Look At Mobile Benchmarking By Dorian Black Over the past few years, Kishonti has become a leading name in mobile GPU benchmarking. The newly-released GFXBench 3.0 is comprised of nearly all new tests, including battery, render quality, and the first serious OpenGL ES 3.0 performance metric.
Nvidia Tegra K1 Benchmarks from Lenovo ThinkVision 28 By Dorian Black, Alex Davies Nvidia is claiming the new mobile performance king at CES this year with its new Tegra K1 SoC. Luckily, Lenovo had a working K1-based product on the showroom floor, and we managed to run a few benchmarks. So, does Nvidia’s new Tegra live up to the hype?
EVGA Tegra Note 7 Review: Nvidia's Tegra 4 For $200 By Marcus Yam, Dorian Black Nvidia is partnering with EVGA on the company's second Tegra 4-based device. Its Tegra Note 7 sells for $200, sports unique stylus technology, and ships with a bloatware-free build of Android. Can it set a new standard for affordable seven-inch tablets?
UK retailer Offering Rebranded Tegra Note for £180 By Jane McEntegart Another budget tablet hits the UK high street.
Nvidia Releases Massive OTA Update for Shield Console By Jane McEntegart Nvidia's Shield gets Android 4.3 support as well as several other new features.
64-bit Nvidia Tegra 6 "Parker" Chip May Arrive in 2014 By Kevin Parrish Devices with a 64-bit Tegra 6 could launch before the end of 2014.
Nvidia Tegra Tab Specs Leaked via FCC Documents By Jane McEntegart Yet more details of Nvidia's Tegra Tab emerge, this time courtesy of the FCC.
Nvidia Shield Review: Tegra 4-Powered Handheld Gaming By Chris Angelini, Marcus Yam We've been playing with Nvidia's Shield handheld for more than a month, but only recently got access to its killer feature: streaming PC game content. Does Nvidia's foray into the hardware world deserve your $300, or is this expensive toy impractical?
Nvidia's Kepler Architecture: Coming To An SoC Near You By Chris Angelini We're still waiting for the first Tegra 4-based device (Nvidia's Shield) to officially launch, but the company is already talking about the Kepler-based GPU in its next-generation Tesla SoC. Is the company planning to license this technology out?
Nvidia Shield: Piloting A Drone With The Tegra 4 Handheld By Chris Angelini Nvidia just announced that its Shield console will be delayed until July. We've been playing with one though, and wanted to post our first experiences using Shield to pilot Parrot's AR.Drone 2 using the latest build of its AR.Freeflight software.
First Nvidia Tegra 4i Smartphone Glimpsed By Tomshardware Nvidia showed its Tegra 4i prototype -- the mid-range SoC for mid-range phones at mid-range pricing.
Nvidia Shield: Hands-on Impressions With the Final Hardware By Marcus Yam Nvidia's big jump into making a gaming tablet.
Nvidia Names New Head of Tegra Chip Division By Kevin Parrish Philip Carmack is moving on to another company, and Deepu Talla is moving up to fill his shoes.
Nvidia's Tegra 4 GPU: Doubling Down On Efficiency By Chris Angelini After fending off barbs from its competition about Tegra 3's power consumption under load, Nvidia wanted to show off the architectural efficiency of Tegra 4. We sat down with the company for a deep-dive on the SoC family's unique GPU implementations.
VIDEO: Nvidia Demos Borderlands 2 on Project Shield By Kevin Parrish Project Shield may encourage Radeon gamers to get a GeForce card and Nvidia's handheld console.
Nvidia Shield: Hands-On With A Tegra 4-Based Handheld By Chris Angelini Our first stop at this year's CES was Nvidia's suite in the Palms, where company representatives showed off pre-production versions of its Shield handheld. Chris Angelini weighs in with some of the specifics, plus his impressions of Nvidia's effort.