"But turn it on and you see a bright (though not very saturated), sharp 3.7-inch 640 x 480 VGA screen. Backing up the screen is an entirely new video architecture based on the first PDA graphics chip with dedicated memory, the Intel 2700G. The 2700G, with its 16MB of dedicated VRAM, delivers full-screen, high-quality video and impressive 3D-gaming performance. It's like changing from PCI to AGP graphics on a PC. But right now, only two games (Enigmo and StuntCar Extreme) and Windows Media Player 10 use the new chip. With all other software, you won't notice the difference.
When we downloaded a movie to the X50v from a Media Center 2005 PC, we were blown away by the smooth motion and nearly high-def resolution; an HP iPAQ h4705 trying to play the same file stuttered and dropped frames. (You can download from any PC, as long as it has WMP10 installed.) But until more applications are rewritten to support the 2700G, the Axim x50v won't be able to perform to its potential."
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,1759,1714732,00.asp