![]() ![]() We don’t have any hard numbers yet on the FP32 and FP64 numbers, but we know that the Tensor core throughput has been affected somewhat, dropping from 120 TFLOPS down to 110 TFLOPS on the TITAN V. It’s important to look at this carefully, because this also reduces the total bit-rate and effective bandwidth available to the GPU. One key difference compared to the V100 is a reduction in VRAM, going from 16GB down to 12GB of HBM2. So this does mean that the TITAN V is definitely more professional and compute orientated than gaming. We don’t have all the details just yet, but there is a striking resemblance with the V100, and it’s quite a different GPU that we would expect, given how previous TITAN GPUs have used the consumer GX102 GPUs instead of the workstation GX100 GPUs. ** Peak TFLOP/s rates are based on GPU Boost clock. * Subject to change – no offical specs yet The TITAN V is the first consumer-ish graphics card from NVIDIA to sport HBM2 memory, which is the same as the V100, in fact, you’ll quickly find that the two cards are very similar. While technically not the first Volta card from NVIDIA to hit the market, it is the first that will be commercially available, since the V100 is an enterprise card and very difficult to get a hold of (also comes with an eye-watering price to match). The double whammy of it: They've positioned the pricing of Turing as a kick in the junk to every one of their customers, new and old, alike.If you like absurd numbers, this is the card for you. With the recent cryptocurrency craze that provided nVidia an excuse to gouge and drive prices of Pascal into high earth orbit (and nVidia recently announcing record profits because of it), nVidia now seems to think that everyone will simply open their wallets willy-nilly at these inflated prices. Titan used to be the crowned king gaming GPU of their lineup, with a price tag that kept this single PC component out of the hands of everyone except for the well-to-do that felt the need to stretch their epeens. "The introduction of T-Rex puts Turing within reach of millions of the most demanding PC users - developers, scientists and content creators." "Turing is NVIDIA's biggest advance in a decade - fusing shaders, ray tracing, and deep learning to reinvent the GPU," said Jensen Huang, founder and CEO of NVIDIA. ![]() TITAN RTX provides multi-precision Turing Tensor Cores for breakthrough performance from FP32, FP16, INT8 and INT4, allowing faster training and inference of neural networks. VirtualLink port provides the performance and connectivity required by next-gen VR headsets. Incredible performance and memory bandwidth for real-time 8K video editing. 100GB/s NVIDIA NVLink can pair two TITAN RTX GPUs to scale memory and compute. 24GB of high-speed GDDR6 memory with 672GB/s of bandwidth - 2x the memory of previous-generation TITAN GPUs - to fit larger models and datasets. 72 Turing RT Cores, delivering up to 11 GigaRays per second of real-time ray-tracing performance. The NVIDIA TITAN RTX has the following specifications: 576 multi-precision Turing Tensor Cores, providing up to 130 teraflops of deep learning performance. These features, along with the increased compute and enhanced rasterization capabilities of the NVIDIA TITAN RTX, will power the workloads of millions of developers, designers and artists across multiple industries. The NVIDIA TITAN RTX features Turing functionality like the new RT Cores to accelerate ray tracing and Tensor Cores for AI training and inferencing. The NVIDIA TITAN RTX is a professional tool designed for the most demanding of PC users - developers, scientists and content creators. At the Conference on Neural Information Processing Systems in Montreal, Canada (NeurIPS), NVIDIA announced the "T-Rex" launch later this month with a $2,499 MSRP. Today NVIDIA has unleashed the TITAN of Turing the NVIDIA TITAN RTX.
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