- Joined
- May 8, 2016
- Messages
- 1,908 (0.61/day)
System Name | BOX |
---|---|
Processor | Core i7 6950X @ 4,26GHz (1,28V) |
Motherboard | X99 SOC Champion (BIOS F23c + bifurcation mod) |
Cooling | Thermalright Venomous-X + 2x Delta 38mm PWM (Push-Pull) |
Memory | Patriot Viper Steel 4000MHz CL16 4x8GB (@3240MHz CL12.12.12.24 CR2T @ 1,48V) |
Video Card(s) | Titan V (~1650MHz @ 0.77V, HBM2 1GHz, Forced P2 state [OFF]) |
Storage | WD SN850X 2TB + Samsung EVO 2TB (SATA) + Seagate Exos X20 20TB (4Kn mode) |
Display(s) | LG 27GP950-B |
Case | Fractal Design Meshify 2 XL |
Audio Device(s) | Motu M4 (audio interface) + ATH-A900Z + Behringer C-1 |
Power Supply | Seasonic X-760 (760W) |
Mouse | Logitech RX-250 |
Keyboard | HP KB-9970 |
Software | Windows 10 Pro x64 |
Fermi was LATE to the party.Fermi was released about the same time as AMD 5xxx series of GPUs, which still do not support DX12, fwiw.
AMDs 5870/5850 were on market for half a year, before first Fermi was released (September 2009 vs. March 2010).
So, a fair comparison would be between it and Radeons of HD 6000 series.
Still, Radeons can't have DX12 support because doing it for VLIW5/4 based architectures is too expensive and not necessary at this point from AMD point of view.
I'm really glad NV added DirectX 12 to Fermi, because it means you don't need a PCI-e 3.0 GPU to have it