Thursday 28 June 2012

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Tegra 3 Brings Google’s Nexus 7 Tablet To The Masses

Posted: 28 Jun 2012 10:32 AM PDT

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The mobile technology industry moves with head-snapping speed.

The NVIDIA Tegra 3 mobile processor has quickly moved to the epicenter of the mobile computing revolution, and has been featured in some of this year's biggest consumer product launches.

Introduced moments ago, Google's Nexus 7 tablet is the first consumer device to run the new Android "Jelly Bean" operating system. Leveraging our new low-cost KAI platform, the Nexus 7 highlights no-compromise performance, system-level optimizations and the best of Google in a beautiful, full-featured Android tablet that costs just $199.

The Google Nexus 7 Tablet

Tegra 3, with its quad-core 4-PLUS-1 architecture, continues its run of previous wins. Its blazing speed, outstanding battery life and super-smooth touch response make for a fast, fluid experience that's hard to match.

Just last week, the first Tesla Model S all-electric sedan rolled off the assembly line, with its Tegra-powered infotainment system winning rave reviews.

Tegra will be in well over 30 devices this year. Among them are tablets – such as the ASUS Transformer Prime, Transformer Infinity Pad TF700,  and Transformer Pad TF300; Acer Iconia Tab A110, A510 and A700; Toshiba Excite 7.7, 10 and 13 – as well as super phones, like the HTC One X and LG Optimus 4X HD.

For now, I'd really like to focus on what makes the Nexus 7 so amazing.

KAI provides a recipe for tablet-makers looking to build low-cost tablets with a premium experience. KAI's basics include the Tegra 3 quad-core mobile processor with its unique fifth battery-saver core, and system-level innovations like PRISM – a new Tegra 3 technology that reduces a mobile device's backlight intensity (and power) while simultaneously enhancing color saturation. The result: undiminished visuals with longer battery life.

Showing off these qualities, the Nexus 7 steps where no other 7-inch tablet has gone before. It's a full-fledged Android tablet – perfect for consuming movies, games, books, music and the web, not to mention over half a million apps on Google Play  – with battery life of 8 hours for HD video playback.

The best part? The Tegra 3-powered Google Nexus 7 tablet is priced at $199. That opens the door for many more folks to a premium quad-core tablet with a great Tegra-enabled experience.

Over the last year, the tablet market has grown dramatically with innovations in cost, industrial design and features. The Nexus 7 is the result of great partners building the right products at the right time.

This will be an exciting year. Stay tuned.

Next-gen TegraZone Games Debut on Google Nexus 7 Tablet

Posted: 27 Jun 2012 04:49 PM PDT

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Google just upped the ante in the Android-tablet space earlier today with the announcement of their Tegra 3-powered Nexus 7 tablet at the Google I/O show in San Francisco.

We've already talked about the Nexus 7's quad-core Tegra 3 innards. So, let's switch gears and take a peek at some of the latest mobile games being demonstrated at the show. Two were showcased on stage.

Horn was demo'ed on the Nexus 7 tablet in the Google I/O Day 1 keynote, as a revolutionary third-person action-adventure game developed by Phosphor Games and published by Zynga. The game displays the pinnacle of what's possible in mobile games with its dynamic and engaging console-quality world. Based loosely on the Old English tales of King Horn, you play as a young blacksmith’s apprentice named Horn who wakes up to find your village overrun by large, fantastic and sometimes humorous monsters. It is revealed these creatures are actually the people and animals from your village transformed by a curse, and you alone have the power to free them.

You'll navigate Horn along his journey with accessible and intuitive touch controls to walk, jump, crawl and grapple hook through a rich and unique fantasy world. Tegra 3 exclusive enhancements include shadows, physically simulated cloth and dynamic water simulation.

Dead Trigger was also featured on the Nexus 7 in today's keynote. In Dead Trigger, the world has collapsed due to a strange infection that turns regular people into zombies, and it's up to you and your arsenal of weapons to take down the undead masses. You can find even more information about the game in our Dead Trigger blog post.

If you're at Google I/O, stop by the NVIDIA pod at the Developer Sandbox and check out Horn along with these upcoming games – all playable for the first time – coming to TegraZone soon:

Beach Buggy Blitz THD comes to us from the folks who brought you Tegra-optimized games like Riptide GP and Shine Runner. Vector Unit's latest game is built around an "infinite drive" mechanic that challenges players to drive through lush environments – power-sliding through beaches and volcanos, catching big air off massive jumps, and smashing through totally destructible environments. Tegra 3-exclusive features include lens splash effects and dynamic headlights in caves.

Bladeslinger THD challenges you to play as the hero who's come home after years away at war only to discover someone – or something – has corrupted everyone in the town. You'll need to uncover what's happened and cure the town of this corruption. Tegra 3 exclusive features include cloth simulation, advanced light systems, ragdoll physics and additional enemies on screen.

ExZeus II THD aims to add more depth to the original hit game while providing Tegra 3-exclusive features such as unique weaponry and greater detailed environments. Upgrades available throughout the game will have an effect on your robot's specs, helping you progress through more difficult levels.

Be sure to check out these great games at Google I/O and download two new additions to the TegraZone family, available today: Heroes Call THD and Puddle THD.

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