Hardware support: Chinese Laptop Featuring New 14nm Loongsoon 3A4000 CPU Appears |
- Chinese Laptop Featuring New 14nm Loongsoon 3A4000 CPU Appears
- Alleged AMD Radeon RX 6800 Time Spy and Tomb Raider (with DXR) performance leaks out - VideoCardz.com
- NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti could launch on November 17th - VideoCardz.com
- Intel’s Discrete GPU Era Begins: Intel Launches Iris Xe MAX For Entry-Level Laptops
- Intel’s DG1 GPU Coming to Discrete Desktop Cards Next Year; OEM-Only
- [Notebookcheck] AMD's Frank Azor confirms Radeon RX 6000's ray tracing and super sampling info will be available in the run up to launch
- AMD Smart Access Memory – what it is and how it works
- Is the 3080 just a locked down 3090?
- Deep Learning and the Compute Divide in Artificial Intelligence Research
- VIS 2020: Industrial Keynotes - Intel(about oneAPI)
- Can someone please ELI5 to me the difference between the Turing vs Ampere architecture?
Chinese Laptop Featuring New 14nm Loongsoon 3A4000 CPU Appears Posted: 31 Oct 2020 04:44 PM PDT |
Posted: 31 Oct 2020 03:14 AM PDT |
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 Ti could launch on November 17th - VideoCardz.com Posted: 31 Oct 2020 07:17 AM PDT |
Intel’s Discrete GPU Era Begins: Intel Launches Iris Xe MAX For Entry-Level Laptops Posted: 31 Oct 2020 09:17 AM PDT |
Intel’s DG1 GPU Coming to Discrete Desktop Cards Next Year; OEM-Only Posted: 31 Oct 2020 09:25 AM PDT |
Posted: 01 Nov 2020 01:36 AM PDT |
AMD Smart Access Memory – what it is and how it works Posted: 31 Oct 2020 05:21 AM PDT |
Is the 3080 just a locked down 3090? Posted: 01 Nov 2020 01:32 AM PDT Looking at specs we see that both the 3080 and 3090 have 28.3 billion transistors meaning it's actually the same die, it's just that the 3080 has more of the die disabled (and less VRAM, smaller cooler, etc), this can be by disabling defective parts of the die but it could also be the case that nvidia is disabling healthy parts of dies for segmentation purposes (the die itself is cheap to make). [link] [comments] |
Deep Learning and the Compute Divide in Artificial Intelligence Research Posted: 31 Oct 2020 07:15 AM PDT |
VIS 2020: Industrial Keynotes - Intel(about oneAPI) Posted: 31 Oct 2020 08:52 AM PDT |
Can someone please ELI5 to me the difference between the Turing vs Ampere architecture? Posted: 31 Oct 2020 07:32 AM PDT I'm just new to PC building but when I buy my parts I don't want to be fooled and squandered into buying a card just because it says mOrE vRaM!!!! (which I've learned isn't the end all be all of GPU power) This is my first time delving into pc building in general and I plan on buying an NVIDIA card under the 30- line, but I don't know if I should just save money and go for the 20- line with the Turing architecture. People are saying the Ampere one of the 30- line is better but how? And why? I understand there's more CUDA cores but people also tell me the number of CUDA cores doesn't represent the power of a GPU as well. TL;DR: Is the Ampere architecture better than the Turing ones? How so? [link] [comments] |
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