There’s a new NVIDIA Titan X in town, and it costs $1200
Nvidia has just unveiled their newest Titan card, and this one’s powered by the same proprietary Pascal technology that makes the 10 series possible. It sounds like the Nvidia CEO was doubtful whether it could be achieved, as he now owes Kelleher a dollar… The card was announced tonight at artificial intelligence gathering that took place at Stanford University and Jen-Hsun Huang gave away a few of the cards to some of those attending the event!
For the first time in a consumer graphics cards, a single GPU could deliver 11 TFLOPS of floating point performance. Why is that important?
Converting this price to UK GBP and adding VAT, we predict the new GP102 graphics card to be launch at £1100-1200. It also has 44 TOPS of INT8, a new deep learning inferencing instruction that should appeal to the non-gaming enthusiast crowd.
Inside this unit you’ll find a brand new chip by the name of GP102.
Consoles provide some real advantages, and price is only one of them. As we told you before Titan X is using GDDR5X and not the HBM 2 simply because the new memory is still not available. The clock speeds have also been ramped up significantly, with the boost clock shooting up from 1.08GHz to 1.53GHz in the new card. This can power a display at maximum digital resolution of 7680 x 4320 at 60Hz. It’s a surefire way to get the most out of your PC games and, of course, all your Oculus Rift and HTC Vive content. On 14 July 2016, Nvidia released Ansel support on Mirror’s Edge: Catalyst. While the GM200 Titan X had 8 billion transistors and a 336 GB/s memory bandwidth, Nvidia’s new card is equipped with 12 billion transistors and 480 GB/s memory bandwidth, among other vital elements that contribute to performance.