I was under the impression that it was meant as a gaming architecture, so Tensor cores seem unlikely. Also, it should be Ampère/Ampere, not Ampre... ;-)
I was under the impression that it was meant as a gaming architecture, so Tensor cores seem unlikely. Also, it should be Ampère/Ampere, not Ampre... ;-)
The upcoming GameWorks SDK — which will support Volta and future generation GPU architectures — enable ray-traced area shadows, ray-traced glossy reflections and ray-traced ambient occlusion.
https://www.rockpapershotgun.com/20...phics-cards-specs-release-date-price-rumours/According to information obtained by completely unknown means by Wccftech, the Nvidia GeForce GTX 1180 may well bear a closer resemblance to today’s GTX 1080Ti than the GTX 1080. Powered by a GPU currently known as the GT104, the GTX 1180 will allegedly have a whopping 3584 CUDA cores, a 256-bit GDDR6 memory interface and between 8-16GB of GDDR6 memory, clocked at 16Gbps.
If true, this would mean the GTX 1180’s memory is significantly faster than either the 8GB of GDDR5X memory currently in the GTX 1080 or any known form of HBM2 memory (2nd Gen high-bandwidth memory). This in turn would give the GTX 1180 a huge memory bandwidth of 512GB/s. For comparison’s sake, the GTX 1080 only offered 320GB/s, while the GTX 1080Ti provides 484GB/s.
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The graphics card itself, on the other hand, would be clocked somewhere in the region of 1.6GHz, with a max boost clock of around 1.8GHz. The thermal design power (TDP), meanwhile, is expected to be somewhere between 170-200W.
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Those very same leaked specs also contain a potential price for the GTX 1180 as well: a rather eye-watering $699. That’s $100 more than the GTX 1080’s launch price, but given current graphics card prices (even if they are, in fact, starting to come down now), that may well actually be a good thing rather than bad.
If true, this would mean the GTX 1180’s memory is significantly faster than either the 8GB of GDDR5X memory currently in the GTX 1080 or any known form of HBM2 memory (2nd Gen high-bandwidth memory). This in turn would give the GTX 1180 a huge memory bandwidth of 512GB/s. For comparison’s sake, the GTX 1080 only offered 320GB/s, while the GTX 1080Ti provides 484GB/s.
You can tell rock-paper-shotgun isn't remotely decent for hardware commentary the moment they come up with a statement like this.
Even the Titan V with a cut-down memory sub-system goes up to 652GB/s, and AFAIK the widest HBM2 implementation is on NEC's Tsubasa with 6 stacks and 1.2TB/s.
Right, but Titan XT still will be faster as Titan V (excluding double precision, question mark for tensor cores).
Also memory bandwith with 384 GDDR6 bus will likely be higher as from 3 stacks HBM2.
What's now being speculated as "Turing" was first speculated as "Volta" because there was no reason to believe NVIDIA wouldn't bring gaming versions of Volta until the relatively recent rumors of Ampere and later Turing (reportedly same thing) - in fact it's still possible that the whole Ampere/Turing is bogus rumors and it's really Volta, or it could be just Volta renamed for whatever reason with some tweaks, likely cutting Tensors etcFunny there is speculation about Turing in the Volta thread
What's now being speculated as "Turing" was first speculated as "Volta" because there was no reason to believe NVIDIA wouldn't bring gaming versions of Volta until the relatively recent rumors of Ampere and later Turing (reportedly same thing) - in fact it's still possible that the whole Ampere/Turing is bogus rumors and it's really Volta, or it could be just Volta renamed for whatever reason with some tweaks, likely cutting Tensors etc
edit:
And to add to this, Volta is still the newest architecture NVIDIA has mentioned on their roadmaps
There are no gaming versions of Volta, there is a reason Titan Volta is called Titan V and not Titan XV.
Volta is a non gaming architecture HBM2 (gaming will use GDDR6), double precision, NV link, high tensor core mixed precision TFLOP/s (for AI/ML training) Volta can be used for gaming though but from a price/performance point of view it is not optimal.
Remove all these things from Volta and it's a pretty great gaming architecture. Is this what Turing/Ampère is? If so, does it warrant a new name? Does that make it a new architecture? I fear we may be venturing into semantics, here.
Technically AMD never said "Vega M" uses "Vega-architecture" thoughWell, AMD just made the architecture naming thing a whole lot looser with Vega M...
But are any of those "architecture defining features"? Previously we've had chips based on same architecture with and without fast double precision, with several different memory standards (including HBM2) and so on.There are no gaming versions of Volta, there is a reason Titan Volta is called Titan V and not Titan XV.
Volta is a non gaming architecture HBM2 (gaming will use GDDR6), double precision, NV link, high tensor core mixed precision TFLOP/s (for AI/ML training) Volta can be used for gaming though but from a price/performance point of view it is not optimal.
(¬_¬)Technically AMD never said "Vega M" uses "Vega-architecture" though
(¬_¬)