Thursday, April 20th 2017
NVIDIA's Volta Reportedly Poised for Anticipated, Early Q3 2017 Launch
According to a report from Chinese website MyDrivers, NVIDIA is looking to spruce things up on its line-up with a much earlier than expected Q3 Volta Launch. Remember that Volta was expected, according to NVIDIA's own road-maps, to launch around early 2018. The report indicates that NVIDIA's Volta products - apparently to be marketed as the GeForce 20-series - will see an early launch due to market demands, and NVIDIA's intention to further increase pricing of its products through a new-generation launch.
These stand, for now, as only rumors (and not the first time they've surfaced at that), but paint a pretty interesting picture, nonetheless. Like Intel with its Coffee Lake series, pushing a product launch to earlier than expected has consequences: production, logistics, infrastructure, product roadmaps, and stock of existing previous-generation products must all be taken into account. And with NVIDIA just recently having introduced its performance-champions GTX 1080 Ti and Titan Xp graphics cards, all of this seems a trigger pull too early - especially when taking into account the competition landscape in high-performance graphics, which is akin to a single green-colored banner poised atop the Himalayas. And NVIDIA must not forget the fact that AMD could be pulling a black swan off its engineering department with Vega, like it did with its Ryzen series of CPUs.Any new Volta products would most likely use HBM2 or GDDR5X memory, considering that Micron itself is looking to begin sampling its GDDR6 products towards the end of 2017 or early 2018. With AMD's Vega languishing in the corner as we expect it to finally make an appearance, which also carries HBM2 memory, it would be expected that its availability is good enough to power multiple graphics cards from both vendors. And if previous rumors are true, the usage of a cutting-edge 12 nm process is also in the works.
The only reason I see NVIDIA pulling Volta's Launch to 3Q2017 is to steal some thunder from AMD's expected 2Q2017 Vega launch, looking to stay buyer's hands from jumping ship. If there were some products to be launched, I would expect a Pascal refresh until 2018's actual GeForce-branded Volta, especially considering how NVIDIA can easily put its mainstream GPUs in direct competition to AMD's recently released RX 500 series. Volta being launched for the HPC market, however, makes sense: NVIDIA's "Datacenter" revenue is posting the company's greatest increases QoQ and YoY. It is, in potential, a much more lucrative market than its gaming segment, and it would make total sense to see NVIDIA pulling its Volta architecture towards the HPC market, much like the company did with its GP100 Pascal chip.
Sources:
MyDrivers, ETeknix, The Motley Fool
These stand, for now, as only rumors (and not the first time they've surfaced at that), but paint a pretty interesting picture, nonetheless. Like Intel with its Coffee Lake series, pushing a product launch to earlier than expected has consequences: production, logistics, infrastructure, product roadmaps, and stock of existing previous-generation products must all be taken into account. And with NVIDIA just recently having introduced its performance-champions GTX 1080 Ti and Titan Xp graphics cards, all of this seems a trigger pull too early - especially when taking into account the competition landscape in high-performance graphics, which is akin to a single green-colored banner poised atop the Himalayas. And NVIDIA must not forget the fact that AMD could be pulling a black swan off its engineering department with Vega, like it did with its Ryzen series of CPUs.Any new Volta products would most likely use HBM2 or GDDR5X memory, considering that Micron itself is looking to begin sampling its GDDR6 products towards the end of 2017 or early 2018. With AMD's Vega languishing in the corner as we expect it to finally make an appearance, which also carries HBM2 memory, it would be expected that its availability is good enough to power multiple graphics cards from both vendors. And if previous rumors are true, the usage of a cutting-edge 12 nm process is also in the works.
The only reason I see NVIDIA pulling Volta's Launch to 3Q2017 is to steal some thunder from AMD's expected 2Q2017 Vega launch, looking to stay buyer's hands from jumping ship. If there were some products to be launched, I would expect a Pascal refresh until 2018's actual GeForce-branded Volta, especially considering how NVIDIA can easily put its mainstream GPUs in direct competition to AMD's recently released RX 500 series. Volta being launched for the HPC market, however, makes sense: NVIDIA's "Datacenter" revenue is posting the company's greatest increases QoQ and YoY. It is, in potential, a much more lucrative market than its gaming segment, and it would make total sense to see NVIDIA pulling its Volta architecture towards the HPC market, much like the company did with its GP100 Pascal chip.
42 Comments on NVIDIA's Volta Reportedly Poised for Anticipated, Early Q3 2017 Launch
Way to early for such a improvement... :wtf:
Curious on the Pros and Cons of this setup against HPM2.
If you bought titans or Ti's you're asking for unnecessary wallet rape :ohwell: :rolleyes: :pimp:
a) it would make the 11 Gbps Pascal line obsolete
b) nobody would buy 1080 Ti if they can get a better and cheaper 2070
Unless:
a) Volta is only Pascal refresh
b) RX Vega is a killer card
c) JHH has gone mad :)
Pick the most probable one :p
I'm disgusted
Oh, wait:
pretty sure Nvidia is sitting on a hell of a lot of tech that would improve graphics cards by 500% but why waste that all on the next gpu when you can just give us a 100% for full price for the coming 5 years.
MOAR MONEYZ YO.
This rumour is nothing more than the marketing department doing it's job. I'll take another post, added an inch to my epecker! :roll:
It's been known for a year that Nvidia have a deal to supply GV100 based servers in ~September 2017, so they will be delivering a limited batch in Q3.
Consumer products are scheduled for early 2018, and will not start with the big Volta chip.
Nothing to see here just some rumours reported from one site that's been quiet for a while. Hopefully Vega arrives in 2 weeks because that's May and it's meant to be out then..... That's when all the fanboys can cry (well, one side will be).
The community is speculating it'll release then alongside Bethesdas new 'Prey', that's all. The only confirmation we have from AMD is 1H 2017, I'm assuming you what half of 12 is?