I am sorry but its not in the forum rules as far as I see. I dont see why it should be issue at all. Somebody should clearly explain why.
Beside that I have disclaimer under the pictures which tells that it does not represent the original LFS S2.
Sony has been always able to develop a very good own technology or with cooperation of some other companies. Cell in PS3 is good example.
I have no doubt that Sony licencing ARM9 CPU has been able to put together a quad core ARM9 in limited samples. There is already ARM9 2 core CPU in Motora Atrix and LG Optimus 2X.
Imagination who developed GPU for mobile devices and SGX Series5XT in Sony NGP (PSP2) had in his own portfolio up to 16 core GPU(attached file from Imagination).
The specs for single core SGX543 are 35M Poly/sec and around 1Gpixel fillrate @ 200Mhz. We dont know what will be the frequency in PSP2 so the numbers might be even much higher. Its said the scalling is highly efficient so for quad core GPU it should be 130-140M Poly/sec and around 4Gpixel fillrate which is pretty impressive for the size of the chip and power consumation.
as some of you have probably noticed Sony announced & showed new portable gaming device PSP2.
The specs are pretty impressive:
- quad-core ARM Cortex-A9 processor
- quad core GPU SGX543MP4 (speculation: 130-280Million Poly/sec, 4Gpixel fillrate - half or close to PS3 GPU performance)
- 5-inch touchscreen OLED display with 960 x 544 resolution
- dual analog sticks
- rear-mounted multitouch touchpad
- 3G, WiFi, GPS, Bluetooth
- 3-axis gyroscope & accelerometer & compass
- front and rear camera
- built in stereo speakers & microphone
turn off the AA in LFS and set it for example to 4xAA in drivers (no application controlled). The AA in LFS does not seems to be well integrated and causing issues sometimes.
Victor said in the video they achieved realistic behaviour of Scirocco in LFS. So either they were not telling true or I dont know.
We have at least 2 core CPU since 2005 yet LFS cant fully use it. Scawen limit the development himself unless the next big thing he is working on is full multicore support.