Tegra brand starts speculations about new Nvidia products
Mountain House (CA) - Our colleagues over at X-bit Labs discovered a new brand recently registered by Nvidia : Tegra. Could there be a fourth product family in the works ?
The brand was caught very early in the and there is very little information available about it so far – in fact, what we know for sure is that this new brand will describe “Integrated Circuits” in the Goods & Services (G & S) category. Integrated Circuits can really mean a lot of things ; however, until Nvidia’s lawyer team does not provide information about the brand’s expanded use, we won’t know for sure what Tegra is.
Tegra looks like it will be the third brand in Nvidia’s product portfolio, following GeForce (including nForce), Quadro and Tesla. Tesla is the newest brand in the company’s lineup and was introduced as a name for the firm’s supercomputing products. Tesla, of course, goes back to Nicola Tesla, a Serbian physicist and electrical engineer, but we don’t have such clear hints with Tegra.
Tegra is a widely used company name in design, healthcare, financial, analysis and consulting industries. You can even buy Tegra toner cartridges, or 1940’s comics with Tegra, the Jungle Empress. Owners of the Acura Integra also like to call their car the “Tegra”. So, your guess is as good as ours what it actually will be.
In this author’s personal opinion, Tegra could be expansion or successor of nForce brand. Why ? Well, wee have noticed that some chipsets are getting a GeForce tag instead of nForce (GeForce 8200 for AMD, CN+GeForce platform for VIA). Another idea could be that Tegra will be Nvidia’s application processor business - APX2500 is not exactly a good name for an otherwise brilliant System-on-Chip. One of our readers suggested that Tegra could hint towards the integration of audio in upcoming platforms or a product coming out of a possible merger with Creative Labs. Let the speculation begin.
- Business and marketing managers take home the big bucks in video gaming
- Adobe seeks to unify digital video formats with CinemaDNG
- Seagate sues flash drive maker STEC
- Protecting your camera in the world's largest water fight Part 2
- Google teams up the the NCMEC to help combat child porn
- Random House follows Google into letting customers preview books online
- Dolby Mobile could become a secret weapon for smartphones
- What Apple products you should not buy today
- AMD Phenom triple-cores more expensive than quad-cores
- Amazon music store not really denting iTunes
- Terahertz computing may not be dead after all
- Update: Apple wants to get rid of third-party Mac maker
- XP Service Pack 3 heading out in two weeks
- Wii Fit to be most expensive Wii game to date
- AMD expected to cut 510-850 jobs this Thursday
- Intel takes aim at AMD's cash cow
- What Apple products are safe buys today
- Researchers from Glasgow University announce breakthrough in data storage





Integrated graphics?
Integrated systems? I'd agree polarity - it does sound like a play on the the words "integrated" or "integral"
Exactly (+graphics) Nvidia isn't going to be using anything existing from their GPU range as an onboard chip for the 2D side, not when every single 3D chip for the last few years has been way overpowered for that purpose (in both performance and watts). Hopefully they'll be doing something that will bring back the days of the matrox mystique/millenium. For 2D graphics those things were astounding. I've yet to see anything clear the end screen of solitaire as fast!