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+7 +1
Batman: Arkham Knight system requirements detailed
Nvidia have revealed the PC system requirements for the highly anticipated Batman: Arkham Knight.
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+6 +1
Nvidia re-enables lock on GTX 980M clock speeds in recent driver updates
Nvidia has angered gamers once again after enabling a previous "clockblock" on 980M mobile chips which makes it impossible to overclock them.
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+1 +1
ASUS shows off GTX 980 Ti Poseidon, MATRIX, STRIX and Gold Edition
Guys over at Cowcotland made a trip to ASUS press event where new high-end graphics cards were shown.
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+1 +1
Palit GeForce GTX 980 Ti Super Jetstream Review (Guru3D)
In this review we benchmark the new Palit GeForce GTX 980 Super Jetstream, a product that will command and conquer as it offers massive game rendering performance at 100% quiet nose levels.
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+2 +1
AMD has 'priority access' to HBM2, an advantage over NVIDIA
The future of video card technology is HBM, with AMD holding the keys to 'priority access' of HBM2 production
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+1 +1
Zotac GeForce GTX 980 Ti AMP! Extreme
Extreme by name, extreme by nature.
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+2 +1
Nvidia SHIELD Android TV Console Review
Nvidia has had some pretty solid products in the SHIELD line so far: So how does the new Android TV console shape up?
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+2 +1
Nvidia Pascal GP100 GPU Flagship Will Pack A 4096-bit Memory Bus And Four 8-Hi HBM2 Stacks
The GPU will be made with two different variations of stacked HBM2 solutions, however both will feature a massive 4096bit memory interface just like AMD’s flagship Fiji GPU launched last month.
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+2 +1
Nvidia Pascal GPU has 17 billion transistors
Pascal is the successor to the Maxwell Titan X GM200 and we have been tipped off by some reliable sources that it will have more than a double the number of transisters. The huge increase comes from Pascal's 16 nm FinFET process and its transistor size is close to two times smaller.
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+17 +1
NVIDIA Pascal GPU to feature 17 billion transistors and 32 GB HBM2 VRAM
In an exclusive report published by Fudzilla, the site reveals that NVIDIA’s next generation Pascal GPU will feature 17 billion transistors crammed inside its core. Currently, the flagship GM200 core found on the GeForce GTX Titan X comes with 8.0 Billion transistors while the competitor, the Radeon R9 Fury X has a total of 8.9 Billion transistors inside its Fiji GPU.
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+2 +1
Both Nvidia And AMD Sides of The GameWorks Story
For this exclusive piece we reached out to Nvidia and AMD to hear both sides of the GameWorks debate and get to the bottom of the issue.
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+14 +1
Ubuntu Launches Its "Fresh" Proprietary Driver PPA
Following yesterday's article about Ubuntu developers wanting to make it easier to run the newest proprietary NVIDIA drivers, a new PPA has been established. The new Personal Package Archive is simply called Proprietary GPU Drivers. So far this proprietary driver PPA just contains the updated NVIDIA Linux drivers, including the latest stable 352 series as well as the exciting new 355.06 Beta.
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+2 +1
Trying Out The Open-Source NVIDIA/Nouveau Driver Rework In Linux 4.3
With the forthcoming Linux 4.3 kernel is a big rework to the open-source NVIDIA (Nouveau) driver. Here are our first tests of NVIDIA GeForce hardware under Linux 4.2 stable and then the Linux 4.3 Git code with this reworked driver.
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+28 +1
Nvidia Launching Fastest GeForce Ever - Dual GPU Monster Graphics Card Coming Soon
Nvidia is about to launch its fastest GeForce GTX graphics card ever, a brand new dual GPU flagship product that’s coming out sooner than you might think. This upcoming monster of a graphics card will feature two GM200 class GPUs, the same GPUs that Nvidia uses to power its ultra enthusiast class GeForce GTX Titan X and GTX 980 Ti graphics cards.
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+33 +1
Nvidia replaces its Game Ready driver for The Division with something less terrorizing
Earlier this week, we reported on version 364.47 of Nvidia’s ‘Game Ready’ GeForce driver that quickly added support for Vulkan as well as some freshly instated optimizations for new and upcoming games such as Tom Clancy’s The Division and Need for Speed. Unfortunately, it appears the graphics company may have released the driver prematurely, as a number of users are reporting various technical issues on its official feedback thread.
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+16 +1
AMD’s Radeon Pro Duo mashes two Fury GPUs together for 16 teraflops of compute
After first being teased at E3 2015, AMD has finally made its dual Fury GPU official. Dubbed the Radeon Pro Duo, the card combines two of AMD's top tier Fiji GPUs (as used in the Fury X and Fury Nano) onto a single card, resulting in a claimed 16 teraflops of compute performance. The price for such power? A mere $1499 (UK pricing TBC, but probably around £1200). The Radeon Pro Duo goes on sale in "early" Q2 2016.
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+36 +1
Nvidia creates a 15B-transistor chip for deep learning
Nvidia chief executive Jen-Hsun Huang announced that the company has created a new chip, the Tesla P100, with 15 billion transistors for deep-learning computing. It’s the biggest chip ever made, Huang said. Huang made the announcement during his keynote at the GPUTech conference in San Jose, California. He unveiled the chip after he said that deep-learning artificial intelligence chips have already become the company’s fastest-growing business.
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+23 +1
This tiny supercomputer is all the rage
To companies grappling with complex data projects powered by artificial intelligence, a system that Nvidia calls an “AI supercomputer in a box” is a welcome development. Early customers of Nvidia’s DGX-1, which combines machine-learning software with eight of the chip maker’s highest-end graphics processing units (GPUs), say the system lets them train their analytical models faster, enables greater experimentation, and could facilitate breakthroughs in science, health care, and financial services.
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+27 +1
Nvidia and Audi aim to bring a self-driving AI car to market by 2020
Nvidia announced several new partners for its efforts to bring autonomous cars to public roads in a production capacity today, but the biggest by far was Audi. Nvidia is working with the carmaker to bring its AI driving tech, which is available thanks to its latest in-car autonomous computing hardware and software, to market by 2020.
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+9 +1
Nvidia’s GeForce Now puts a gaming PC in the cloud
Nvidia today announced the launch of its GeForce Now platform for PCs during its CES keynote tonight. As the company’s CEO Jen-Hsun Huang noted during today’s keynote, the majority of PCs in use today aren’t able to play modern games simply because they can’t support modern graphics cards. GeForce Now for PCs will simply these potential gamers to access a cloud-based gaming service.
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