Wednesday, April 23rd 2014
GeForce GTX TITAN-Z Market Availability Detailed
NVIDIA's upcoming flagship graphics card, the dual-GPU GeForce GTX TITAN-Z, could see the light of the day (well, lights of a hardware store/warehouse), on April 29, 2014. That's when you'll be able to buy the card from ground stores off the shelf, or order one online. It's expected to stick to the price NVIDIA announced when it was unveiled at GTC 2014, which is a wallet-scorching US $2,999 (excl. taxes). Depending on your country's taxation and import excise, you could be paying anywhere between 10 and 33 percent over that. In Japan, for instance, the card is expected to be priced around 400,000¥ (incl. taxes), which converts to about $3,900.
The GeForce GTX TITAN-Z is a dual-GPU graphics card with a pair of 28 nm GK110 GPUs. The chips are configured to feature all 2,880 CUDA cores, 240 TMUs, and 48 ROPs at their disposal; and are each wired to 6 GB of GDDR5 memory across their 384-bit wide memory interfaces, totaling 12 GB on the card. The best part? Unlike AMD's Radeon R9 295X2, the GTX TITAN-Z is air-cooled. Just be ready with three slots in your system, and give up on your dream of equipping your ITX rig with it.
Source:
Hermitage Akihabara
The GeForce GTX TITAN-Z is a dual-GPU graphics card with a pair of 28 nm GK110 GPUs. The chips are configured to feature all 2,880 CUDA cores, 240 TMUs, and 48 ROPs at their disposal; and are each wired to 6 GB of GDDR5 memory across their 384-bit wide memory interfaces, totaling 12 GB on the card. The best part? Unlike AMD's Radeon R9 295X2, the GTX TITAN-Z is air-cooled. Just be ready with three slots in your system, and give up on your dream of equipping your ITX rig with it.
41 Comments on GeForce GTX TITAN-Z Market Availability Detailed
But I'm guessing wait for a water block for your ITX system! :)
While I am at it someone please beat me over the head with a two foot pink dildo!!!
Or, I'd buy one of the available 3-slot ITX cases already available.
Hard to find good help these days :eek:
What the hell did i just read...
What I'd like to know is what is the non-gaming market for this? Do cuda developers need the professional drivers or can they just use the standard enthusiast ones for their work? Or is the market universities that try to do HPC calculations on these things? Again can they run their models with the less reliable enthusiast drivers?
A lot of CG render engines and CAD software run OK with GeForce cards as it is. I'm guessing that the Titan Z would be aimed at single+double precision mixed workloads (AutoCAD for example) The CUDA toolkitincludes its own driverif you need it Quadro and Tesla are binned to offer the lowest runtime error rate, so I'd guess that if the workload was critical you'd stick with the professional cards.
Because that must be specific type of customer, someone who have everything and money for everything to invest 3000$ in less performance than 2xGTX780Ti 6GB Classified.
And who will buy Titan Z near GTX780Ti 6GB SLI.
www.geforce.com/whats-new/articles/announcing-the-geforce-gtx-titan-z
They are aiming this card at gamers. I hold to the opinion that it would be a lot cheaper to buy 2 Titan Blacks and SLI them and if someones case is too small then buying a new case and SLI capable mobo still works out to be cheaper. Chances are that if anyone has $3,000 to spend on a graphics solution then they already have very good components to begin with.
I hope they send 1 to W1zzard to bench. I have no plans to buy the card but I am curious what it's capable of doing.
www.ncases.com/
www.indiegogo.com/projects/ncase-m1-mini-itx-pc-case
hardforum.com/showthread.php?t=1717132
but the day i will take a Titan Z will be the end of the world ... we are all doomed o_O
wait ... i rather take a full ATX case and 2 295X2 for the same price and even throw some more cash to get a custom loop with 2 aqua computer block so, no end of the world :laugh:
actually i have a Sugo SG09B µATX who seems to be likely the same size as that case :toast: