Friday, August 16th 2024
TechPowerUp Releases GPU-Z v2.60.0
TechPowerUp has released version 2.60.0 of GPU-Z, a popular graphics sub-system information, monitoring, and diagnostic utility. This latest update brings significant enhancements, including full support for the Arm64 architecture and Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite GPUs. The release also adds support for AMD Zen 5 CPU temperature monitoring and a wide range of new GPUs from NVIDIA, AMD, and Intel. Notable additions include the NVIDIA 4070 Ti Super (AD102), RTX 4070 (AD103), RTX 4060 Ti (AD104), RTX 4060 (AD106), as well as AMD Zen 5 (Strix Point and Granite Ridge), and Intel Raptor Lake U SKUs and Meteor Lake Intel Arc Graphics.
In addition to expanded hardware support, GPU-Z 2.60.0 addresses several important issues. The update fixes NVIDIA driver version reporting for some pre-2015 versions, resolves an installer problem that prevented closing running instances of GPU-Z, and corrects the "0 MHz" memory clock display on certain AMD RDNA GPUs without overclocking support. Other improvements include a small handle leak fix, added support for the Monster Notebook subvendor ID, and compatibility with new VMWare virtual GPU IDs. The installer now requires Windows 7 or newer, with appropriate messaging for unsupported systems. Users can download the latest version of TechPowerUp GPU-Z from the official TechPowerUp website to access these new features and improvements.
DOWNLOAD: TechPowerUp GPU-Z 2.60.0Below, you can check out the complete changelog list.
In addition to expanded hardware support, GPU-Z 2.60.0 addresses several important issues. The update fixes NVIDIA driver version reporting for some pre-2015 versions, resolves an installer problem that prevented closing running instances of GPU-Z, and corrects the "0 MHz" memory clock display on certain AMD RDNA GPUs without overclocking support. Other improvements include a small handle leak fix, added support for the Monster Notebook subvendor ID, and compatibility with new VMWare virtual GPU IDs. The installer now requires Windows 7 or newer, with appropriate messaging for unsupported systems. Users can download the latest version of TechPowerUp GPU-Z from the official TechPowerUp website to access these new features and improvements.
DOWNLOAD: TechPowerUp GPU-Z 2.60.0Below, you can check out the complete changelog list.
- Added full support for Arm64 and Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite and other Arm64 GPUs
- Added support for AMD Zen 5 CPU temperature monitoring
- Fixed NVIDIA driver version reporting for some specific versions, due to leading zeros (before 2015)
- Fixed installer isn't able to close running instances of GPU-Z
- Installer now requires Windows 7 and newer, appropriate messaging is displayed when not supported
- Fixed small handle leak
- Fixed "0 MHz" memory clock display on some AMD RDNA GPUs without overclocking support
- Added Monster Notebook subvendor Id
- Added support for NVIDIA RTX 4070 Ti Super (AD102), RTX 4070 (AD103), RTX 4060 Ti (AD104), RTX 4060 (AD106), A1000, A400, RTX 500 Ada Laptop, RTX A2000 Ada Embedded, Drive PG199, H100 NVL
- Added support for AMD Zen 5 (Strix Point and Granite Ridge), Phoenix Radeon 740M
- Added support for Intel Raptor Lake U SKUs, Meteor Lake Intel Arc Graphics
- Added support for new VMWare virtual GPU Id
34 Comments on TechPowerUp Releases GPU-Z v2.60.0
It wouldn't run on my phone with a Tensor G2 since it doesnt support ray tracing.
Not a single game uses Vulkan RT
The chip ID is parsed. Than the values from that big lookup table is than presented to the user?
Or are those sizes and features of the chip determined by the software and not from a lookup table?
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There a few tools to read out some values in userspace in Gnu Linux. It depends on the chip in question. I doubt the windows code is any portable to gnu linux. It's another operating system with another kernel (=linux = only the kernel).
Also DirectX support, so that the correct hardware support capability is listed on all operating systems. Current capability can be checked using Advanced -> DirectX 12
and of course some logic must be hardcoded like "10DE is NVIDIA", or "memory bandwidth is calculated using the formula ..."
TechPowerUp GPU-Z Validation m34w8