Nvidia’s long-rumored Turing GPU architecture for next-generation graphics cards is finally official, and it’s more than we could have hoped for.
Turing incorporates a number of new features and technologies, chief among them are new RT Cores that power real-time ray tracing. These specialized cores essentially compute how light and sound travel in a 3D environment at a rate of up to 10 GigaRays.
That might sound like a made up unit of measuring performance, but Nvidia claims Turing can process real-time ray tracing 25-times faster than the previous Pascal architecture. The technology firm also noted that its GPU nodes can outperform CPU nodes by 30 times when used for final-frame rendering for film effects.
On top of this specialized ray tracing technology, Nvidia has also integrated the Tensor Cores seen in Volta to inject artificial intelligence into this GPU architecture. These Tensor Cores will essentially deliver up to 500 trillion tensor operations a second and accelerate deep learning training and inferencing.
AI will in turn help power new rendering methods such as deep learning anti-aliasing, which promises a high-quality image rendering complete with de-noising, resolution scaling and video re-timing.
A bold new world for graphics
Nvidia Turing will combine both its RT Cores and Tensor Cores to usher in a new form of hybrid rendering that includes both simulation and enhanced rasterization. Team Green announced this technology will first power media production in the visual effects industry to create cinematic-quality interactive experiences.
To that end, Nvidia also introduced three new Quadro RTX graphics cards featuring up to 48GB of GDDR6 memory, 4,608 CUDA Cores and 576 Tensor Cores built upon the Turing architecture.
Although Nvidia made no mention of Turing-based GeForce graphics cards, this is the clearest picture thus far of what they could end up looking like. We’re almost certain that we’ll see the Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080 or Nvidia GeForce GTX 1180 by the end of the month.
- Never heard of ray tracing? We’ve got just introductory guide you’re looking for
from TechRadar: computing components news https://ift.tt/2P4j8M1
via IFTTT
No comments:
Post a Comment