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4 votes
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On a simplified approach to achieve parallel performance and portability across CPU and GPU architectures
5 votes -
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang and the King of Denmark plug in the country's first AI supercomputer – Gefion leverages 1,528 Nvidia H100 AI GPUs
5 votes -
New largest prime number found! 2¹³⁶²⁷⁹⁸⁴¹-1. See all 41,024,320 digits.
36 votes -
GPU couture – Living the Nvidia loca [someone designed a purse made out of a GPU]
6 votes -
Nvidia RTX 50 graphics card family TDPs 'leaked' by Seasonic
31 votes -
Build small, play big – Introducing Small Form Factor-ready enthusiast GeForce cards and compatible cases
15 votes -
Stability AI reportedly ran out of cash to pay its bills for rented cloudy GPUs
28 votes -
Advice on GPU upgrade wanted
So I'm in the market at the moment for a GPU upgrade. I haven't spent a dumb amount of money on something stupid in a while now and I'm thinking this Christmas season is the time. My only problem...
So I'm in the market at the moment for a GPU upgrade. I haven't spent a dumb amount of money on something stupid in a while now and I'm thinking this Christmas season is the time. My only problem is, I've been really out of the loop since the Great Shortage. I've heard AMDs cards these days are actually more than complete jokes, and NVIDIA has been getting too big-headed and making some poor consumer choices. So a switch to AMD sounds like it might be viable for me.
At the moment, I've got an RTX 2070 8GB. I've read that lately, games have been utilizing VRAM like crazy so I want to bolster my numbers on that front. Was looking at 12GB cards since the 24GB ones are all ludicrously priced. At the moment, I'd say my budget is around 500/600 USD. Is AMD worth switching to at the moment? Or should I go for something like a 4060?
21 votes -
“Gaming Chromebooks” with Nvidia GPUs apparently killed with little fanfare
11 votes -
With growing demand for Nvidia's GPU chips there might not be enough to go around
24 votes -
Inflection AI develops supercomputer equipped with 22,000 NVIDIA H100 AI GPUs
7 votes -
Practically no one's buying current generation video cards
109 votes -
A history of NVIDIA Stream Multiprocessor
2 votes -
Use.GPU goes trad
4 votes -
Defective vapor chamber may be causing RX 7900 XTX overheating issue. A recall could be on the horizon.
9 votes -
Tales of the M1 GPU
11 votes -
Unlaunching the 12GB 4080
16 votes -
Intel's Arc A770 GPU is priced at $329
7 votes -
EVGA terminates NVIDIA partnership, cites disrespectful treatment
25 votes -
Suggest me a GPU
Building myself a computer for the first time, and I have most of the parts specced except for the GPU. I don't play a lot of video games, so my first priority is getting something that can...
Building myself a computer for the first time, and I have most of the parts specced except for the GPU. I don't play a lot of video games, so my first priority is getting something that can display output at all; but I would like something a bit capable, as I do play some 3d games from time to time. Prefer an nvidia gpu, as I would like to play with some nv-specific features (nv_path_render, maybe cuda), but not a hard requirement.
I've spotted the following gpus on craigslist:
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gtx 1070 - C$260 (~$200 usd)
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gtx 1660 super - C$320 (~$250 usd)
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gtx 1070 ti - C$300 (~$230 usd)
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gtx 1050 ti - C$120 (~$90 usd)
Any suggestions? Something else I should look out for? Are these good prices?
8 votes -
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NVIDIA releases open-source GPU kernel modules
28 votes -
Nvidia confirms they accidentally released a driver that removed the Ethereum-mining limitations on RTX 3060 GPUs, undermining their attempt to make the cards unappealing to cryptominers
25 votes -
When important components become scarce
6 votes -
Apple preparing next Mac chips with aim to outclass top-end PCs; up to 32 core CPU's, 16 core GPU's rumored
18 votes -
Arm officially supports Panfrost Open-Source Mali GPU driver development
7 votes -
AMD announces CPU and GPU events on October 8th and 28th
@AMD Gaming: Join us on October 8 and October 28 to learn more about the big things on the horizon for PC gaming. pic.twitter.com/9dy8Lt5MP8
14 votes -
NVIDIA announces Ampere-based RTX 30 series GPUs
19 votes -
Questions about graphics card failures
TL;DR: How long should a graphics card last? What can I do to make them last longer? This is perhaps an odd question to ask, but I've been a console gamer for most of my life and have only been...
TL;DR: How long should a graphics card last? What can I do to make them last longer?
This is perhaps an odd question to ask, but I've been a console gamer for most of my life and have only been all-in on PC gaming for maybe 1-2 years and I think I may be missing something.
So there has been about three times when I have spent money on a half-decent graphics card, and each time they have failed me. The first one was a genuine hardware failure, probably a memory failure judging from the artifacting. The second one failed for reasons I have been unable to figure out. It didn't appear to be overheating, but I was getting driver errors that suggested it were; reinstalling from scratch did nothing to fix it.
The last, most current one is the one that bugs me the most. I'm getting the same problems; driver crashes just like overheating, except this one has better temperature monitoring and I can see that isn't happening.
I previously thought that the reason why my graphics cards would always crap out on me was because those were cheaper cards from less reputable manufacturers, but this last one is really bugging me because it's relatively high end and from a reputable manufacturer - it's a Gigabyte Radeon RX 5700, complete with the giant AMD reference cooler. I'm getting it RMAed, but since I didn't keep the receipt I am still going to have to pay to fix it even though it should theoretically be under warranty.
I've done a ton of searching to find out how I can possibly solve this myself, but I am frankly astounded by how little information the drivers give out on Windows. I'm seeing that the device is being reported as unavailable but nothing whatsoever as to why.
To make matters worse, it seems like this isn't actually common for other people. Most people seem to be replacing their graphics card because they are obsolete, not because they physically fail.
So basically what I am asking is, how long is a graphics card actually supposed to last for? Do I just have astonishingly bad luck?
10 votes -
Microsoft launches Surface Book 3
6 votes -
AMD's Big Navi and Xbox Series X GPU 'Arden' source code stolen and leaked
6 votes -
Information, photos, and demo of Intel's first discrete graphics card: the DG1, based on Xe graphics architecture
9 votes -
Razer wants gamers to mine cryptocurrency for store credit
11 votes -
Nvidia RTX 2080 Ti graphics cards are dying in alarming numbers
16 votes -
Nvidia announces RTX 2000 GPU series with ‘six times more performance’ and ray-tracing
30 votes -
Intel Graphics teases first PC graphics card for 2020
@intelgraphics: We will set our graphics free. #SIGGRAPH2018 https://t.co/vAoSe4WgZX
27 votes -
Cheap AliExpress graphics cards - scam?
6 votes -
Cryptocurrency has been great for GPU makers—that might change soon
5 votes