Its laptops will have them in single-GPU or SLI options

Mar 24, 2012 11:01 GMT  ·  By

We reported how NVIDIA's new Kepler-based GPU line includes a bunch of mobile products, and Eurocom was quick to start cashing in on the opportunities they present.

In addition to the GeForce GTX 680 Kepler desktop card, NVIDIA launched the 600 series of mobile GPUs, which we covered here.

Eurocom has now stated that the new GPUs will be featured in its professional mobile machines, as an alternative to Quadro GPUs.

“NVIDIA's updated GeForce GTX line of GPUs will offer extreme professional capability, gaming and CUDA development performance for our customers,” explains Mark Bialic, President of Eurocom.

“With many CUDA cores the GeForce GTX line is ideal for CUDA development which enables the GPU to solve complex computational problems in business and technical applications for utilization within the Eurocom notebook line.”

Both single-GPU and SLI configurations will be possible when choosing a notebook, for maximum 3D professional capability.

The gaming-centric Optimus 11.6-inch and 15.6-inch gaming laptops will get the 600M as well, specifically the GeForce GT 650M.

For those who don't know, this discrete video solution is a 2 GB DDR3 version with 384 CUDA cores and 850 MHz GPU frequency, plus Optimus support of course.

"Our new class of little gaming monsters will offer our clients the ultimate in portable gaming in both 11.6 and 15.6 inch notebooks. These systems allow users to have true on the go gaming capability that is currently not offered by current handheld and lightweight devices" says Mark Bialic.

"Eurocom notebooks are high performance mobile computing solutions that are designed to offer the customer complete freedom in upgradeability and configurability. We are excited about our support of these ultra powerful GPUs and the performance they will offer our clients," said Mark Bialic, President of Eurocom.

In addition to the above, the company has upgraded the Panther 4.0, whose other specs we wrote about in detail here.