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Intel and Nvidia both offer integrated chipsets for Socket 775, and the two platforms appear to be very similar at first glance. But they are, in fact, very different when you turn them inside out, when it comes to doing more than just office work. Both are manufactured on 65 nm processes, but the Intel G45 chipset is based on two chips, while Nvidia crammed all of its features into a single piece of silicon. Intel focuses on turning the platform into an all-in-one solution for the office and the digital home, while Nvidia capitalizes on its floating point horsepower, which is provided by the 16 unified shaders.

Intel G45: The Clockwork Chipset

If you browse Intel’s product database at ark.intel.com you’ll find that the G45 chipset is guaranteed to be manufactured for 7+ years, which is a significant factor for corporate users or system builders, who want to support their systems for a long time. This also applies to drivers: even though Intel had a pretty rough start with its G45 platform, the driver support has been steady.

We did not perform a lot of graphics testing, as we don’t believe it makes a lot of sense to treat G45 like a gaming platform when in fact it is not, but you can expect G45 motherboards to deliver a reliable and timely integrated graphics platform. It’s faster than any Intel chipset before it, though it still cannot catch up to discrete graphics solutions.

Nvidia GeForce 9400 mGPU: The Visualist

We found that the GeForce 9400 motherboard by DFI was more power efficient at peak loads than the G45, while providing 2-3x more 3D performance. As a result, the Nvidia platform is considerably superior when it comes to power efficiency under 3DMark Vantage, which we used as a 3D workload. Efficiency in desktop applications and video playback is on par with the G45 and so is performance. If you don’t know what to buy, you can purchase the cheaper solution with confidence, as long as you trust the brand.

However, the Nvidia chipset has two aces up its sleeves: CUDA and PhysX. Chances are good that a more significant number of applications will be adjusted to take advantage of Nvidia GPUs and their massive floating point performance, in order to accelerate workloads such as video or audio transcoding, image rendering, encryption or decryption and so forth. The same applies to PhysX, which can be used to increase behavioral realism in 3D environments.

In the end, we recommend a GeForce 9400 mGPU platform if you’re not sure what to use, if you get a better deal than on a G45 motherboard, or if you are into video and gaming. In these segments, the Nvidia platform is superior to Intel’s offering. The G45 remains the best choice if you’re already working with Intel hardware and intend to stay on familiar ground.

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Anonymous 08/04/2009 13:09
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another article to prove that Intel IGP is inferior :D

wild9 08/04/2009 18:14
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..and the reason why people still buy AMD rigs :)

wild9 08/04/2009 18:28
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Quote :Instead, you have to select nForce—which alone may be impossible for someone who is not familiar with the NVIDIA portfolio—check nForce 7 series and then select nForce 730i/GeForce 9400/9300.


I hope nVidia picks up this. There are similar problems when trying to source drivers for AMD platforms, or find general information on their feature sets. With different labels to represent the same product it can be very confusing. Surely they can simplify it.

mi1ez 08/04/2009 18:32
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Could you run an AMD card in the NVidia board and use physx accel through the mobo?

edisback 08/04/2009 23:24
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Wow, Is Tom's Hardware saying that the G45/ GeForce 9400 motherboard architecture has made such a leap forward in power efficiency that the 'System idle power'(if not quite peak power) figures are not that dis-similar to the G31 motherboards reviewed in the "G31 And E7200: The Real Low-Power Story" story?

http://www.tomshardware.com/review [...] 39-13.html

The power savings from the G45/ GeForce 9400 motherboard architecture(s) must be considerable considering the extra power required for the Quad processor's and all the extra components on the G45/GeForce 9400 motherboards ......


Have the G45/ GeForce 9400 motherboards knocked the G31/ E7200 combo of their low power perch?

madogre 09/04/2009 16:41
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No you cant run physx on the 9400 and then run an ATI GPU for gaming.

BenSheriff 08/09/2009 04:26
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who the hell wants to run ati lolz. Nvidia always provides better clarity and perforamnce amd/ati has always got error , bugs , delays and ofc HEAt issues!

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