Thursday, August 16th 2018
NVIDIA Settles Next-Gen GeForce Naming Confusion: It's GTX 2080 (or RTX 2080?)
When NVIDIA teased its August 20 event with the #BeForTheGame video earlier this week, we didn't pay as close attention to the chat the gamers were having in it, as some redditors. A screengrab confirms two things: One, that NVIDIA will launch its next-generation graphics card on August 20; and two, that the card will be named GeForce GTX 2080. This settles the debate on whether NVIDIA uses the GeForce 11-series progression or GeForce 20-series. The 10-series (eg: GTX 1080, 1070, etc.) felt like a natural continuation of 900-series (GTX 980, 970); while 20-series (eg: 2080, 2070), similarly feels like a natural succession of 10-series.
Update: Some users are also paying attention to another screengrab with a username RoyTeX, hinting at the possibility of NVIDIA disposing of the "GTX" moniker for "RTX," as it did with its recent Quadro RTX series. If true, the nomenclature could look something like GeForce RTX 2080, RTX 2070, etc. Apparently NVIDIA is going big with its real-time ray-tracing tech.
Source:
TaintedSquirrel (Reddit)
Update: Some users are also paying attention to another screengrab with a username RoyTeX, hinting at the possibility of NVIDIA disposing of the "GTX" moniker for "RTX," as it did with its recent Quadro RTX series. If true, the nomenclature could look something like GeForce RTX 2080, RTX 2070, etc. Apparently NVIDIA is going big with its real-time ray-tracing tech.
50 Comments on NVIDIA Settles Next-Gen GeForce Naming Confusion: It's GTX 2080 (or RTX 2080?)
So what in there would tell anyone that it was “obviously” going to be a 20-hundred series?
Just admit you made a lucky guess instead of trying to create some kind of logic for them doing it, because there is none. They made an arbitrary decision to change.
And.... in case you weren’t paying attention, they already DID do double digits.
"Lucky guess"? Erm, no. Even if they call it Series 10, that's by no means evident from the GTX 1080 and to an average consumer (stop treating average consumers like they understand anything), it tells them nothing. Your series numbers would make sense if it was GTX10 200/400/600/800. And next generation would be GTX11 200/400/600/800. And GTX12 200/400/600/800. Notice the spacing? People would quickly learn that pattern. But you don't have that. You have GTX 1080. Single number, 4 digits. Going with GTX 1180 would be going against 20 years of version numbers that average consumers are used to. And you just can't afford that. It's literally why AMD named RX 580 as RX 580 instead of RX 490. They wanted to make it absolutely clear to AVERAGE consumer that's a new card. Even if in reality isn't really. But that's what AVERAGE consumer thinks, not you who hangs on TPU and reads every latest in-depth review of a graphic card.
I actually (and I can't believe I'm saying this!) can see what Rej is saying. Put on some Jason Nevins V Run DMC; It goes a little something like this...
In semantics, it still makes no sense but in phonetics, it 'feels' better:
GTX 7xx = 700 series - 'seven hundred' series
GTX 9xx = 900 series - 'nine hundred' series
GTX 1xxx = 1000 series - 'one thousand' series
GTX 11xx = 1100 series - 'one thousand one hundred' series
And that is the disconnect. It places the 100 of 1100 as a subset of one thousand. It's also a mouthful. So, instead,
GTX 2xxx = 2000 series - 'two thousand' series
Admittedly it sounds better although, in pure logic, it makes zero sense unless you look at the mouthfeel of the word. In other words, what does Joe Smoke prefer to say?
Obviously, broken down, 1100 would be the Eleven hundred series. And that is very much an English language disconnect. English speaker will readily say eleven hundred but for those whose second (or third) language is English, 'one thousand one hundred' is probably what they learn.
This sound right to all concerned?
Which is why they are so hateable.
Anyway, I want one.
Joe Smoke prefers to say "I own a Gee Tee Ecks Ten Eighty, which I'm going to replace with an Are Tee Ecks Twenty Eighty Tee Eye".
GTX 10xx = 10 series - 'ten' series
GTX 11xx = 11 series - 'eleven' series
GTX 20xx = 20 series - 'twenty' series
Nvidia refers to the GTX 10xx series as the TEN series. Nvidia will refer to the GTX/RTX 20xx series as the TWENTY series. Because this reflects how the names of the products in those series are spoken/pronounced.
www.nvidia.com/en-us/geforce/products/
:roll::roll:
just admit you got it right by accident
in PL they always said "dziesięć sześćdziesiąt" (10-60), not "tysiąc sześdzięsiąt" (1060), cause we know it's the ten series,unlike some people who ought to educate themselves :laugh:
unless you are referring to the phrase spoken in non-English languages.
@Totally
I was talking about non-English languages describing GTX 1080. For example, in my language, there is no wording equivalent of "ten eighty" for 1080. The only version we have of 1080 is "thousand eighty" (tisoč osemdeset). We do say similar as "ten eighty" for 6600 where we say "six six-hundred" or two two-hundred" for 2200. It just sounds a lot more natural in my language "šest šesto" (6600) or "dva dvesto" (2200). I'm guessing some Germanic and Slavic languages may or do use similar number calling.
Streamers that speak English just say it that way because everyone does this way in English.
I dunno. I guess you either get it, or you don't. I, for one, totally get it.
Just release an *TX *070 card which is on the same or faster performance level than the current GTX 1080Ti and call it the day.
It seems more and more that the companies are focusing more on the naming schemes recently than on the actual performance of their products (Apple, Intel, AMD, nGreedia, Samsung, etc...)
Vision and Envy.... I can see why they picked the name.