Sunday, May 17th 2009
NVIDIA GT300 Already Taped Out
NVIDIA's upcoming next-generation graphics processor, codenamed GT300 is on course for launch later this year. Its development seems to have crossed an important milestone, with news emerging that the company has already taped out some of the first engineering samples of the GPU, under the A1 batch. The development of the GPU is significant since it is the first high-end GPU to be designed on the 40 nm silicon process. Both NVIDIA and AMD however, are facing issues with the 40 nm manufacturing node of TSMC, the principal foundry-partner for the two. Due to this reason, the chip might be built by another foundry partner (yet to be known) the two are reaching out to. UMC could be a possibility, as it has recently announced its 40 nm node that is ready for "real, high-performance" designs.
The GT300 comes in three basic forms, which perhaps are differentiated by batch quality processing: G300 (that make it to consumer graphics, GeForce series), GT300 (that make it to high-performance computing products, Tesla series), and G200GL (that make it to professional/enterprise graphics, Quadro series). From what we know so far, the core features 512 shader processors, a revamped data processing model in the form of MIMD, and will feature a 512-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface to churn out around 256 GB/s of memory bandwidth. The GPU is compliant with DirectX 11, which makes its entry with Microsoft Windows 7 later this year, and can be found in release candidate versions of the OS already.
Source:
Bright Side of News
The GT300 comes in three basic forms, which perhaps are differentiated by batch quality processing: G300 (that make it to consumer graphics, GeForce series), GT300 (that make it to high-performance computing products, Tesla series), and G200GL (that make it to professional/enterprise graphics, Quadro series). From what we know so far, the core features 512 shader processors, a revamped data processing model in the form of MIMD, and will feature a 512-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface to churn out around 256 GB/s of memory bandwidth. The GPU is compliant with DirectX 11, which makes its entry with Microsoft Windows 7 later this year, and can be found in release candidate versions of the OS already.
96 Comments on NVIDIA GT300 Already Taped Out
I'm guessing these will be out around christmas along with i5 and Windows 7.
around 2100 shaders
GDDR5
thats what the rumors say but based on ati's previous releases its more than likely real
but if I had to guess I would say at least 2400 shaders
my future rig is waiting for this beast!
eVGA X58 759 + Dominator GT 2000Mhz + this beast = invincible!!! (at least 1-2years) lol
But, nvidia seems to have another 8800-like series of video cards out for the next round...if thats the case, I'm not missing out this time, I may switch.
512-bit GDDR5 is sexy.
It may be that there is a bigger win in resolution, ie. can 2560x1600 or a bigger win in shader effects. ie 16xFSAA etc. Only benchmarking will tell.
I wonder with 3 versions of the GPU whether this will impact CUDA abilities. If it does, ie different CUDA capabilities on each, then this will spell disaster for standardising CUDA (and Physx on CUDA) enhancements.
Looking forward to more news...
To get that money clawed back, expect the G300 to be WHOOPASS, but also expect a very high premium card, at least as pricey as a GTX 295
Nvidia has THE DRIVERS...
ATi has nothing compared to nvidia in terms of drivers optimization.
Drivers are important but with this release i thk we'll see the past repeat itself. Not like 2900XT vs 8800GTX, but more like 9800GTX vs HD 3870. The GTX 285 is one hell of a card with 240 SPU's 512-bit GDDR3. GT300 is going to have more than twice as many SPU's, and twice the bandwidth by moving to GDDR5. I just can't see the performance from the chip not destroying ATI's RV870 which i estimate by the specs, will only perform 25-35% faster than HD 4870.