The NVS 810 was a professional graphics card by NVIDIA, launched on November 4th, 2015. Built on the 28 nm process, and based on the GM107 graphics processor, the card supports DirectX 12. The GM107 graphics processor is an average sized chip with a die area of 148 mm² and 1,870 million transistors. Unlike the fully unlocked GeForce GTX 750 Ti, which uses the same GPU but has all 640 shaders enabled, NVIDIA has disabled some shading units on the NVS 810 to reach the product's target shader count. NVS 810 combines two graphics processors to increase performance. It features 512 shading units, 32 texture mapping units, and 16 ROPs, per GPU. NVIDIA has paired 4 GB DDR3 memory with the NVS 810, which are connected using a 64-bit memory interface per GPU (each GPU manages 2,048 MB). The GPU is operating at a frequency of 902 MHz, which can be boosted up to 1033 MHz, memory is running at 900 MHz. Being a single-slot card, the NVIDIA NVS 810 does not require any additional power connector, its power draw is rated at 68 W maximum. Display outputs include: 8x mini-DisplayPort 1.2. NVS 810 is connected to the rest of the system using a PCI-Express 3.0 x16 interface. The card measures 198 mm in length, and features a single-slot cooling solution.