By Darren Allan
AMD is aiming to simplify the process of beefing up laptops by connecting them to external graphics card enclosures, something that could prove popular this year if CES 2016 was anything to go by.
It’s being done through the company’s new XConnect tech, which goes live with the release of AMD’s latest Radeon graphics driver (v16.2.2) today.
To make it work, you hook up your external Radeon (R9 300 and Fury series) GPU — housed in its external docking station — to your Windows 10 laptop via Thunderbolt 3, which delivers up to 40Gbps of bandwidth.
Thanks to a management interface built into the Radeon driver, connecting and disconnecting it from that point on is a simple plug-and-play process similar to removing a USB stick.
The system offers further flexibility in that you can game on the notebook display, or pipe the output to an external monitor if you prefer.
Co-developed
AMD has developed XConnect in conjunction with Intel and Razer, and indeed the first laptop to sport XConnect (the system’s BIOS must be configured to support the tech, as well as having a Thunderbolt 3 port, of course) will be the Razer Blade Stealth …read more
Source:: techradar.com – Computing Components