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Thankfully, the best gaming laptops aren't too difficult to get a hold of, so if you're looking to take a trip back in time, you might want to consider Nvidia's RTX 2050 mobile offering.
For a company that likes to trumpet everything it does, Nvidia's pre- CES announcement of its entry-level laptop graphics chips seems oddly low-key. Not that the GeForce RTX 2050, MX570 and MX550 ...
While we still can't be 100% sure on Nvidia's intent, it seems likely that a mobile GTX 1660 Ti will someday soon make it on to the shelves, rather than the so-far mythical RTX 2050.
Nvidia has announced the upcoming release of three new laptop GPUs: The RTX 2050, the MX570, and the MX550. The new cards are aimed at entry-level laptops.
In addition to the RTX 2050, the company is releasing the GeForce MX570 and MX550 mobile GPUs for laptops. These graphics chips have been designed to power video- and photo-editing tasks.
The GeForce RTX 2050 is based on NVIDIA's previous generation Turing architecture rather than Ampere, the latter of which drives its GeForce RTX 30 series on both desktop and mobile. From the ...
That’s actually not the case. Despite its name, the GeForce RTX 2050 is actually based on the same GA107 Ampere design seen in the RTX 3050 laptop GPU, rather than the Turing architecture of ...
No, it isn’t. The RTX 2050 isn’t a Turing part as we'd expect, but an Ampere generation product, based on the GA107 GPU. This is the same GPU that’s slated to appear in upcoming RTX 3050 cards.
NVIDIA doesn't expect the RTX 2050 or new MX parts to reach shipping laptops until spring 2022. That's an usually long lead time, and suggests NVIDIA is announcing the GPUs now to clear the slate ...