3DC said:NVIDIA
S TAIWAN 1235A1
NCM268.M1W
GK110-885-KA-A1
What I saw several days ago in front of me was quite disappointing. Full HD on a 15-inch laptop running Windows 7. Because of the relatively high resolution and the small display, you had terribly small letters... The picture itself was awful. Scaling was completely messed up. Does it mean that Windows 7 is not ready to adjust this in some user-friendly manner?
looks like somebody removed the heatsink of K20's
http://www.heise.de/ct/inhalt/2013/02/76/
A1 stepping, 35th week of 2012, KA = first MC is disabled(320bit in total)..
I wonder if Nvidia is "happy" with GK110's current performance / watt, or if they plan (or have already done) another revision during the product's lifespan.
What you're saying is this: they tape out GK104, then GK107, then GK106. All 3 chips in 28nm with high volume where optimal yields are critical, yet after that they still didn't get the recipe right?I thought at least one new revision was required for improving yields, frequency potential as well.
What you're saying is this: they tape out GK104, then GK107, then GK106. All 3 chips in 28nm with high volume where optimal yields are critical, yet after that they still didn't get the recipe right?
And, echos from the past, care to explain how you increase frequency by changing metal only? I really want to know the physics behind that.
My point being: metal spins are rarely, if ever, done to fix speed or yield issues. There is simply not much you can fix this way. Now ordinary logic bugs are something else. But since this is a 4th version of the same architecture, chances are that the worst bugs were ready flushed out.
Yes, I know that.GK110 has a few features that its smaller siblings lack (Dynamic Parallelism, Hyper Q, ECC ).
Given that they released it 2 months after 7970, I'm pretty sure they knew at the time it was faster.And still, if I'm not right and GK110 is so late (without GK100), then how in hell did they know that GK104 would be enough to compete with Radeon HD 7970?
Before we have another rewriting of history, it's probably a good time to point out that of the 12 months last year, AMD held the performance crown for 9 of them (and still does).
For single consumer GPU cards, that is, you can't count the unofficial 7990 models to this equation and cardwise, nV has 690
Nvidia revision numbering starts from "1", not zero. Which suggests that Nvidia got it pretty much right at the first time of asking ( 93% (K20X) and 87% (K20) enabled GPUs using 225-235W.I thought at least one new revision was required for improving yields, frequency potential as well.
A1 revision?! Is there a revision A0 prior to it?
For single consumer GPU cards, that is, you can't count the unofficial 7990 models to this equation and cardwise, nV has 690
PC Perspective claims a launch on or around February 25.
IIRC that's right after the Chinese New Year (which a launch needs to work around).