The GPU race continues on once again, as NVIDIA have now officially announced the GeForce RTX 2000 series of GPUs and they're launching in September.
This new series will be based on their Turing architecture and their RTX platform. These new RT Cores will "enable real-time ray tracing of objects and environments with physically accurate shadows, reflections, refractions and global illumination." which sounds rather fun.
They will start off with three models to succeed their current top of the line:
- RTX 2070 with 8GB GDDR6, available in October
- RTX 2080 with 8GB GDDR6, available in September
- RTX 2080 Ti with 11GB GDDR6, available in September
Naturally, for a brand new series they won't be cheap!
The "Founders Edition" NVIDIA are offering will be £1,099/$1,199 for the RTX 2080 Ti, £749/$799 for the RTX 2080 and £569/$599 for the RTX 2070. From what I've seen, these editions will have a higher clock boost over the normal editions.
The normal "Reference" editions will be cheaper of course, with the RTX 2080 Ti at $999, RTX 2080 at $699 and RTX 2070 at $499. Unsure on the UK prices for the normal editions, as I can't see them listed currently but you get the idea.
Direct Link
NVIDIA generally have good support for new GPUs on Linux, so I'm sure a brand new driver is already on the way to be released soon.
See more on the official NVIDIA site, their announcement blog post and this post as well.
Will you be picking one up, will you be waiting for the normal edition or will you wait and see what AMD have to offer?
I zapped around in it a bit. I came to the segment where they show yet another version of "RTX On/Off", or how I would call it: "It looks this shitty if you don't buy the latest GPU from us! The pictures are absolutely not faked, I swear!!1" They showed soft shadows in Tomb Raider. Point lights. RTX off: No shadows. RTX on: Soft shadows. From a point light. A fucking point light. A fucking tiny candle light in the hand of a child throws a big dark shadow in a (dimly) lighted environment, which is already on its own stupid, but it also throws a really soft shadow with big fuzzy edges. Way to go, Nvidia.
This is really what I meant before. You can have all the computing power you want. If you use it wrong, it will look like shit. Having those very pronounced and colorful shadows wobbling around the dancers in the scene is not how it would look. It's an effect turned up to 11. It looks stupid. And then they even manage it to demo an effect that isn't even physically correct: Soft shadows from a point light.
What a joke. A very expensive one.
Last edited by Doc Angelo on 21 August 2018 at 11:20 am UTC
Quoting: GuestI wouldn't buy a card which has mined. (Anyway miners are so greedy they try to sell their second hand cards at absurd prices so mining or not i am not interested.)
I think miners are aiming for the highest frequency at the lowest voltage, because that is how they make money. A gamer overclocks purely for the highest frequency, regardless how much power it will take. Shouldn't a used GPU from a miner be a better choice regarding electromigration?
Quoting: GuestAnd i doubt that many miners are tech savvy enough to undervolt correctly their cards. I know some are.
I bet if gamers can follow a guide to get more fps, a miner can follow a guide to get more money. I think money is a better incentive to maximize - in this case lower voltage, which doesn't cook any component of the card.
Quoting: Doc AngeloMany seem to be afraid of getting used cards that got overclocked. Personally, I think computer parts have no moving parts (fans excluded), so this rule doesn't really apply to them. They either work or not. Computer parts generally stall themselves if they get too hot. Is it known that GPUs die earlier if they are overclocked? I never heard about that. Are there sources?
Yeah check youtube budget channel focused F7GOS talks about how damaged a mining card could be and overclocking does damage the card long term because you are pushing it above its limits they arent set to the factory speed they are set to for shits and giggles.
Usually I run them at 60-140W (depending on ambient room temperature) while mining due to noise and heat, and >140W the profit doesn't really increase much becouse of the diminishing returns in performance and increase in power consumption.
Miners who know what they are doing will not overclock. Most likely they will underclock instead, But then again, can you trust the miner selling his/her second hand card?
Last edited by Brisse on 21 August 2018 at 11:53 am UTC
Quoting: Whitewolfe80Yeah check youtube budget channel focused F7GOS talks about how damaged a mining card could be and overclocking does damage the card long term because you are pushing it above its limits they arent set to the factory speed they are set to for shits and giggles.
As I said, miners don't overvolt, they undervolt. As far as they can. That is the key point to make money with mining. Frequency alone doesn't kill anything as far as I know.
Quoting: TheRiddickYeah except there are no other real options, at least when you go past 1060GTX performance level!!!!!
When there is no alternatives then boycotts are VERY hard to do, your asking people to accept a more expensive and MUCH slower option (Vega)!!!!
Without forget polaris aka RX 480/RX 580 consume too much (around 180 to 200w) compared GTX 1060 with only 120w
Amd need seriously 7nm on gpus for improve consume
Back to RTX only wait to see nvidia said about RTX 2070 have a bit better performance than titan xp and other rumors around improvements on vulkan
However if have similar performance or a bit better of titan xp will be awesome because RTX 2070 only have 2304 shaders vs 3840 shaders of titan xp
^_^
From my experience, as long as the cooling matches the created heat all is fine. But users overclocking on air and cheap OEM parts risk the life of their components. Keep voltages low and usually all is fine.
However, watch out for the increased energy consumption.
Quoting: Doc AngeloQuoting: Whitewolfe80Yeah check youtube budget channel focused F7GOS talks about how damaged a mining card could be and overclocking does damage the card long term because you are pushing it above its limits they arent set to the factory speed they are set to for shits and giggles.
As I said, miners don't overvolt, they undervolt. As far as they can. That is the key point to make money with mining. Frequency alone doesn't kill anything as far as I know.
Its not the voltage thats the problem its the 24/7 running until they stop working thats the problem now it can be minor and you can solve the issues by taking the card apart cleaning the gpu and applying fresh thermal paste and you could end up with fully fuctional card or you could end up with a card that keeps cutting out everytime you start to game.
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