From Reactor Critical
Reactor Critical
Apparently NVidia is going to introduce the new versions of its graphics GeForce4-family processors at Computex, Taipei. According to unofficial facts we learned from
Hardware.Fr, the new GPUs will have only one difference compared to the predecessors: AGP 3.0 support.
SiS has been demonstrating its SiS648 since CeBIT (see this news-story for details) and is possibly going to officially announce it at Computex. VIA Technologies has recently announced the Apollo P4X333 supporting DDR333 and AGP 8X. Therefore, motherboards that will have AGP 8X in the specs will definitely hit the stores sometimes after Computex. In fact, SiS Xabre is the only GPU that have AGP 8X declared (see this news-story for details), so, it is quite logical for NVidia to make formal announcement of AGP 3.0 GPUs, for instance, NV18 and NV28 even if they are simple GeForce4 MX and GeForce4 Ti accordingly. We believe, it is also quite possible that the new solutions will have some other improvements as well.
In fact, AGP 3.0 is going to be massive this year: Matrox Parhelia-512, 3Dlabs P10, Nvidia NV30 and ATI R300 will definitely need a higher AGP bandwidth to perform well. Keeping in mind Taiwanese core-logic developers, we can also note that AMD, NVidia and Intel are likely to launch their chipsets with AGP 8X support this Fall or in the early 2003.
Coming back to Computex we should admit that it will be quite interesting this year: NVidia is going to showcase its NV18/NV28 GPUs, ATI Technologies is likely to announce their RV250 and possibly also R300, or, at least show the latter behind the closed doors (see this news-story for details).
Translated w/ Google from Hardware.fr
According to should our information, NVIDIA launch at the beginning of summer, perhaps at the time of Computex, the evolutions of its NV17 and NV25 called respectively NV18 and NV28. Principale innovation? The support of the AGP 3.0, otherwise known under the name of AGP 8x (from where 8 at the end of the reference). For recall this new graphic bus offers a band-width of 2 Go/S, that is to say twice as much as the AGP 4x. Of course in practice the profit should be only tiny, the more so as few applications call upon the AGP Texturing.
It is not known yet if there will be other changes, even if that appears not very probable Of course being given the arrival to the re-entry of the NV30. as long as NVIDIA did not announce these new GPU this information is to be taken with tweezers... (

sorry just thought that was funny)