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Press Release: Matrox Announces Three Single Slot Intel Based GPUs

Matrox Video Announces LUMA Graphics Cards

LUMA Series Product Image
Image Credit Matrox

MONTREAL — April 27, 2023 — Video technology innovator Matrox Video today announced the launch of its new Matrox LUMA series of graphics cards with Intel Arc GPUs. The series consists of three single-slot cards: the LUMA A310, a low-profile fanless card; the LUMA A310F, a low-profile fanned card; and the LUMA A380, a full-sized fanned card. Matrox Video developed the LUMA range to satisfy significant demand in the mainstream graphics market for driving multiple screens, with a balance between size, reliability, and performance for different applications. The new LUMA series is aimed at high-reliability and embedded PC applications in the medical, digital signage, control room, video wall, and industrial markets.

The LUMA A310 card is the only modern, low-profile fanless card. The fanless design offers quiet operation and eliminates a point of failure (the fan), thereby increasing reliability and extending the card’s life. The LUMA A310 is the perfect choice for anyone needing a small card that fits in a small-form-factor system. Examples include industrial systems that sit on a table or behind a monitor, or surgical displays in an operating room, where there are stringent requirements for reliability.

The single-slot, low-profile LUMA A310F card is perfect for applications requiring more performance, such as in commercial gaming, where casino machines or arcade games require a small card and extra performance to drive video and 3D rendering. Another application is in the retail space to drive multimonitor graphics, such as digital signage and digital menu boards.

The full-sized, single-slot LUMA A380 card packs even more performance and more GDDR6 (6 GB versus 4 GB) than the other LUMA models. In the health care market, the LUMA A380 can power volumetric rendering in medical workstations. In transportation and aviation applications, it delivers multimonitor graphics and video with the best possible performance. In federal and defense applications, such as live operation control rooms and PC-based simulators, users can rely on it to control medium to large video display walls showing multiple video feeds.

All three LUMA cards have four outputs and can drive four 5K60 monitors. (All three can also drive up to 8K60 or 5K/120 displays but are limited to two outputs when doing so.) They are compatible with all the latest graphical capabilities, supporting DirectX 12 Ultimate, OpenGL 4.6, Vulkan 1.3, and OpenCL 3.0, as well as Intel’s oneAPI for compute tasks and the Intel Distribution of OpenVINO toolkit for AI development. The cards also have class-leading codec engines that can both encode and decode H.264, H.265, VP9, and AV1.

Close collaboration with Intel made it possible for Matrox Video to customize certain features of the LUMA cards to address specific market needs and offer several qualities that are in high demand but aren’t available elsewhere:

  • The A310 is the only fanless board of its class on the market.
  • All LUMA cards support DisplayPort 2.1 and can output up to 8K60 HDR.
  • All LUMA cards have a life cycle of seven years, with dedicated customer support. Manufacturers that use LUMA cards in their offerings can reliably sell their products for years without needing to change anything or recertify their systems.
  • All LUMA cards carry a three-year warranty, with the option to extend it.
  • The cards come with Matrox PowerDesk desktop management software to easily configure and manage multidisplay setups.
  • TAA-compliant SKUs are available.

 

“The market has consistently looked to Matrox for high reliability, high stability, multi-head graphics cards with a long life-cycle,” said Daniel Collin, senior product manager at Matrox Video. “With the LUMA family, we are pleased to continue satisfying these requirements in critical environments. Indeed, the alignment with Intel has resulted in a palette of additional features that extend the value we can uniquely bring to our customers as their future needs unfold.”

About Matrox Video

Matrox Video is a global leader in video technology. Featuring a complete portfolio of best-in-class hardware, software, APIs, and SDKs, Matrox Video enables OEMs, system integrators, value-added channel partners, and end users to push the boundaries of video innovation. Serving the AV/IT, broadcast, and emerging markets for over 45 years, Matrox Video is synonymous with quality, performance, interoperability, and support. Matrox Video’s legal entity is Matrox Graphics Inc., part of the Matrox Group.

All trademarks are the property of their respective owners; Intel, the Intel logo, and other Intel marks are trademarks of Intel Corporation or its subsidiaries.
Matrox and Matrox product names are registered trademarks and/or trademarks of Matrox Electronic Systems, Ltd. and/or Matrox Graphics Inc. in Canada and/or other countries. All other company and product names are registered trademarks and/or trademarks of their respective owners.

 

Agency Contact

Veronica Esbona
InGear
Tel: +1 954-629-3302
Email: veronica@ingearpr.com

Matrox Video Contact

Manuel Magini
Marketing Director
Tel: +1 514-294-5526
Email: mmagini@matrox.com

Matrox Video Announces LUMA Graphics Cards














Image Credit Matrox












MONTREAL — April 27, 2023 — Video technology innovator Matrox Video today announced the launch of its new Matrox LUMA series of graphics cards with Intel Arc GPUs. The series consists of three single-slot cards: the LUMA A310, a low-profile fanless card; the LUMA A310F, a low-profile fanned card; and the LUMA A380, a full-sized fanned card. Matrox Video developed the LUMA range to satisfy significant demand in the mainstream graphics market for driving multiple screens, with a balance between size, reliability, and performance for different applications. The new LUMA series is aimed at...

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Phuncz

Lord of the Boards
SFFn Staff
May 9, 2015
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This is an awesome partner for Intel's lineup right now, there needs to be a product for more than a few displays without high power draw or cost.
 
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vinnyoflegend

Average Stuffer
Mar 18, 2022
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Very cool to see the Matrox brand pop up again. Has anyone found any MSRP info? Also curious what the performance level of the A310f is compared to say, RX 6400. There doesn't seem to be any A310 benchmark info in general.

It's safe to assume it is a cut down A380 which is equivalent or slightly better than the RX 6400, but by how much?
 

SFFMunkee

Buy first, justify later?
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Jul 7, 2021
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Yep the A310 uses the same ACM-G11 as the A380 but cut down shaders etc
A310 = 768 shaders / 32 TMUs / 16 ROPs / 96 EUs / 6 RT cores || 64-bit memory interface
A380 = 1024 shaders / 64 TMUs / 32 ROPs / 128 EUs / 8 RT cores || 96-bit memory interface

Given the A380 is similar in performance to the RX6400 I'd expect the A310 to be half to two-third of the performance, but only if you have ReBAR enabled.

The key differentiators will be:
1) A310/A380 both include encode/decode support for VP9/AV1/H264/H265 where the RX6400 has NO encoder at all,
2) A310/A380 has 4 outputs enabled, where the RX6400 is limited to a single DP and single HDMI, and
3) MSRP / actual pricing
 
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vinnyoflegend

Average Stuffer
Mar 18, 2022
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Ah, thanks for the extra detail. I had watched a couple of benchmark videos and it seemed that the A380 was lead or was keeping up with the RX 6400 in some games but saw another review video where it trailed in all but a few games where it lead. Most of theses were from 6-9 months ago so it's unclear if there were any driver performance issues.
 

SFFMunkee

Buy first, justify later?
Gold Supporter
Jul 7, 2021
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Ah, thanks for the extra detail. I had watched a couple of benchmark videos and it seemed that the A380 was lead or was keeping up with the RX 6400 in some games but saw another review video where it trailed in all but a few games where it lead. Most of theses were from 6-9 months ago so it's unclear if there were any driver performance issues.
Intel has supposedly made some major strides in driver improvements since release so older reviews are less representative of what you'd get now.
 
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Revenant

Christopher Moine - Senior Editor SFF.N
Original poster
Revenant Tech
SFFn Staff
Apr 21, 2017
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Intel has supposedly made some major strides in driver improvements since release so older reviews are less representative of what you'd get now.


If I can get Intel to send us a press sample, I'd happily run newer benchmarks.