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NVIDIA Announces the GeForce GTX TITAN-Z

Not necessarily. Tyan sells a custom barebones especially for rendering (the first board below is actually by Trenton, the second a Supermicro), there is a reason why they are fully stocked with boards. If the 4U (in this case) can accommodate 10 GPUs (5 x Titan Z), why would they stick with 8 Titan/Titan Black ? You are potentially losing 20% of the possible performance per unit. It isn't really that much different from server CPU economics- initial cost may be somewhat less than needing extra hardware to achieve the same throughput - there's a reason that there are multi PCI-E slot boards available, and they generally revolve around putting as much processing power as possible into a single unit.

I still don't see how a Titan Z could work in a server case. Those cases are designed for a torrent of front to back air flow. But the Titan Z (and other modern consumer dual GPU cards) exhaust from both the front and rear of the card. In such a server case the Titan Z's front GPU will be starved for cooling since it exhausts against the case's flow of air.

As far as I know you have to go to the Tesla range with NVidia (like the K10) and Firepro with AMD (like the S10000) to get dual GPU cards that will work with front to back airflow.

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tesla_k10.png
 
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Making it seam like every ones doing just because someone has a blog about it doesn't make it the norm.

You can always just read the guys blog. Echelon Blog

I can however not attest to how stable they are in a 24/7 setting. Our systems run 24/7 but computation on GPUs is only done in small bursts throughout the day. There are however some computing centers that run multi-GPU systems (not 8 but 2 or 3 per node) with consumer grade cards quite successfully. There are probably more problems than with professional cards but they are also a lot more expensive.
 
I still don't see how a Titan Z could work in a server case. Those cases are designed for a torrent of front to back air flow. But the Titan Z (and other modern consumer dual GPU cards) exhaust from both the front and rear of the card
You'd be best to direct the question at someone who runs one (or more). There are a few blogs and sites for multi-GPU CG workload machines.
FWIW, the same could be said of the GTX 690 - a card that I've seen more of as an Octane renderer than as a gaming card. Not saying the central radial fan and front exhaust are ideal, since it works against the natural airflow, but it doesn't seem to deter everyone
Tyan barebones rackmount product page.
Making it seam like every ones doing just because someone has a blog about it doesn't make it the norm.
Didn't say everyone was doing it, or is the norm. If it were then Nvidia would be selling boatloads of them wouldn't they?
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I can keep putting up the render rigs if you'd like just to prove that Echelon's isn't the only render rig in existence.
 
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I still don't see how a Titan Z could work in a server case. Those cases are designed for a torrent of front to back air flow. But the Titan Z (and other modern consumer dual GPU cards) exhaust from both the front and rear of the card. In such a server case the Titan Z's front GPU will be starved for cooling since it exhausts against the case's flow of air.

As far as I know you have to go to the Tesla range with NVidia (like the K10) and Firepro with AMD (like the S10000) to get dual GPU cards that will work with front to back airflow.

You just remove the fan unit and shroud. Even if you kept them on, it's not like those fans will actually disrupt airflow in the cases by Tyan and Supermicro. Like a squirrel standing up to a semi.
 
HumanSmoke and your point is?

butthurt much that you need to prove something?
 
Obviously Titan Z was aimed at AMD's W9100 today, which is probably more than $2999.
 
HumanSmoke and your point is?

butthurt much that you need to prove something?

Seems like the norm for his posts..

Might buy one of these if I win the powerball.
 
Yawn Nvidia, I've been enjoying the same kind of performance, if not more, for more than a year, earlier and one thousand cheaper. Old tech and overpriced, give us a new architecture please, stop milking dead horse Kepler.
 
. If the 4U (in this case) can accommodate 10 GPUs (5 x Titan Z), why would they stick with 8 Titan/Titan Black ? You are potentially losing 20% of the possible performance per unit.

You would save $7000. Buy two more Titan Blacks, and use the $5000 left to buy whatever additional server room is needed. I don't see how it comes out ahead.
 
Obviously Titan Z was aimed at AMD's W9100 today, which is probably more than $2999.

Bingo!

What boggles my mind is why call it a Geforce and not Tesla... Seems like Nvidia is trying to appeal to a much wider audience by marketing this card to Compute users as a cheap alternative to Tesla and gamers alike.
 
Bingo!

What boggles my mind is why call it a Geforce and not Tesla... Seems like Nvidia is trying to appeal to a much wider audience by marketing this card to Compute users as a cheap alternative to Tesla and gamers alike.

Doesn't Nvidia still locks cards out from benefiting compatibility with software, Bios + PCB, hardlocks and softlocks so you just cant use or trick it into being a Tesla/Quadro. At $3000 it looses its appeal as a cheap alternative to anything serious.

It might also be feeling pressure from Intel MiCs and AMD FirePro which have started providing competitive products stacks at a much lower price in that segment.

I believe your right though that the aim is more of a Student/Gamer/Novice
 
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Doesn't Nvidia still locks cards out from benefiting compatibility with software, Bios + PCB, hardlocks and softlocks so you just cant use or trick it into being a Tesla/Quadro. At $3000 it looses its appeal as a cheap alternative to anything serious.
Not really, since you can use Quadro and Forceware drivers concurrently. If you need Viewport or pro driver support, it is a simple matter of connecting display out to a cheap Quadro NVS - which typically start at ~$100 (or any other Quadro as the mixed GPU machine picture shows in post #103).
HumanSmoke and your point is? butthurt much that you need to prove something?
Providing a possible usage scenario for the subject of the hardware being discussed.
Providing examples to substantiate said possible usage scenarios.

Maybe I should just take a leaf out of your book and go with the resource-light,-no-thinking-required ad hominem attack that has zero content regarding the actual subject of thread.
xsAcVmm.jpg
 
Not really, since you can use Quadro and Forceware drivers concurrently. If you need Viewport or pro driver support, it is a simple matter of connecting display out to a cheap Quadro NVS - which typically start at ~$100 (or any other Quadro as the mixed GPU machine picture shows in post #103).

Providing a possible usage scenario for the subject of the hardware being discussed.
Providing examples to substantiate said possible usage scenarios.

Maybe I should just take a leaf out of your book and go with the resource-light,-no-thinking-required ad hominem attack that has zero content regarding the actual subject of thread.
xsAcVmm.jpg

butthurt is an adjective (which means it isn't a noun). Therefore it cannot be considered name calling. Now if he called you a hurt butt........
 
butthurt is an adjective (which means it isn't a noun). Therefore it cannot be considered name calling. Now if he called you a hurt butt........
The image I pulled off a Google search as an illustrative. What I actually said was
Maybe I should just take a leaf out of your book and go with the resource-light,-no-thinking-required ad hominem attack that has zero content regarding the actual subject of thread.
 
The image I pulled off a Google search as an illustrative. What I actually said was

Sorry, ignored the text in favor of the colorful image with a large arrow pointing to NAME CALLING.
 
You would save $7000. Buy two more Titan Blacks, and use the $5000 left to buy whatever additional server room is needed. I don't see how it comes out ahead.

It's like when you need to buy an 8-way Xeon instead of getting a pair of quads. The quads have a huge cost advantage but don't provide the necessary performance or are not applicable to your situation.

Similarly, it's going to be far more common to see Titans in use, but there's going to be those occasions where its advantageous to use the Z.
 
Doesn't Nvidia still locks cards out from benefiting compatibility with software, Bios + PCB, hardlocks and softlocks so you just cant use or trick it into being a Tesla/Quadro.

Isn't the only difference ECC support? Though I'm guessing some OpenGL operations are "driver nerfed" for the non-Quadro Titan.
 
Isn't the only difference ECC support? Though I'm guessing some OpenGL operations are "driver nerfed" for the non-Quadro Titan.

Yes. It's compatibility through software. It reverts workload back to CPU or software mode.

There a few sites that try to use software tricks and PCB switching. You can get the software to make it show up as a Quadro and 1 or 2 features on certain commercial products but Its not the same as running a Quadro to a Geforce. Nvidia made sure of that.

Short list
* A lot of memory + ECC support.
* 64x antialiasing with 4×4 supersampling, 128x with Quadro SLI. The Geforce is limited to 32x, but supersampling is used only in certain 8x and 16x modes.
* Display synchronization across GPUs and across computers with the optional Quadro Sync card
* Support for SDI video interface, for broadcasting applications
* GPU affinity so that multiple GPUs can be accessed individually in OpenGL. This feature is available on AMD Radeon but not on Geforce.
* No artificial limits on rendering performance with very large meshes or computation with double precision
* Support for quad-buffered stereo in OpenGL
* Accelerated read-back with OpenGL. There are also dual copy engines so that 2 memory copy operations can run at the same time as rendering/computation. However, this is tricky to use.
* Accelerated memory copies between GPUs
* Very robust Mosaic mode where all the monitors connected to the computer are abstracted as a single large desktop.
 
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Isn't the only difference ECC support? Though I'm guessing some OpenGL operations are "driver nerfed" for the non-Quadro Titan.
Yup. GeForce boards are firmware (and driver) crippled for OpenGL /OpenCL performance, so if the workload is primarily OGL based then no software mods will transform a GeForce's performance. CUDA performance isn't affected in the same way (hardware based).
The other primary differences are runtime validation (fewer errors in calculations) with Quadro, and better Viewport performance. The same applies to the difference between FirePro and Radeon. The video below compares a FirePro W5000 (basically a castrated HD 7850 - 25% fewer cores and texture address units, 50% slower memory) running rings around a Radeon.

Even if/when you can flash a gaming card into a pro card, you still can't get around the better runtime binning of the Tesla/Quadro/FirePro, so whilst you may save cash, it could come at the expense of visual artifacts in 3D renders or similar issues in other workloads.
 
Bingo!

What boggles my mind is why call it a Geforce and not Tesla... Seems like Nvidia is trying to appeal to a much wider audience by marketing this card to Compute users as a cheap alternative to Tesla and gamers alike.

Because the Titan moniker brand falls under GeForce, and has since the original launched, there is really nothing mind boggling about it.

But you may well have nailed it with your assumption, since 3K for higher end Tesla/Quadro cards is really not a lot of money.

You see, when you create a high level brand and expect companies in turn to pay top dollar for it, it actually makes sense to protect that brand.

A concept peeps here clearly struggle with.
 
Meanwhile, AMD released their Hawaii-base FirePro and TPU just ignored it. LOL no bias media
 
Meanwhile, AMD released their Hawaii-base FirePro and TPU just ignored it. LOL no bias media
Technically, AMD just announced the W9100. It hasn't been released. launch is slated for April.
 
After listening to all this, I have an atypical interpretation (or as "Serpent of Darkness covers in point #5) . Nvidia enjoys (nye almost demands) such PR to keep selling GK110's as a gaming offerings, hear me out.

Nvidia knows the tipping point they can recoup engineering, tooling, manufacturing costs to deliver such a card, and they have a good idea the number they can expect to sell. Even if that number of units mainly to enterprise purchasers, the PR frenzy it whips-up within "Gamers" just adds to the business plan for releasing it. It's a perfectly good plan, and it returns venue, actually better profit that selling "X" amount chips individually (at lower margins) as offerings that counteracts AMD Hawaii product. Nvidia gets to elevate the brand even higher, use up chips on extreme products offerings, and that actual adds "cred" to themselves as not directly vying with AMD.

We know 20Nm Maxwell is some time off, Nvidia needs to maintain GK110 production, but can’t hold margins selling a bunch in some price war especially the good full-compute parts. I think the dual chip board Nvidia realized it lends itself to more to low-end enterprise, as the package provide substantial punch in more non-traditional chassis arrangements. Two of them puts 4x compute without the need for risers on a more traditional (cost effective) motherboard, but honestly I don’t how/what is entailed in that today. So, they release this as it devours two full-chips, pays the overhead, return profit, all the while shoring up the legitimacy for the pricing on the GTX 780/780Ti. Best of keeps the gamers in side-bar discussing it. It’s a very shrewd move to extent they use 2x the product (GK110), in an exceptionally high margin offering.

It will find buyers mostly from enterprise/compute that hadn't justified the Tesla/Quarto pricing. I see it as product that 85% of even "bleeding edge gamers" won’t step-up to purchase… that fine. It's a card that folks can use as for experimentation, pushing huge resolutions and multiple monitor configurations, if some deep pocket gamer finds it worthwhile... all the more merry.
This is what I was saying too.
 
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