Page 4 of 4 FirstFirst 1234
Results 76 to 95 of 95

Thread: Asus GTX Titan Black Edition listing spotted

  1. #76
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Posts
    338
    These cards are first maxwell generation, not another kepler. Real maxwell for enthusiast will come later.

    PS. Titan Black will be silently on shelves next week.

  2. #77
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Posts
    225
    Quote Originally Posted by PedantOne View Post
    These cards are first maxwell generation, not another kepler. Real maxwell for enthusiast will come later.

    PS. Titan Black will be silently on shelves next week.
    Does GM107 has an ARM core?

  3. #78
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Posts
    338
    no arm core in first maxwell generation

  4. #79
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Location
    North Queensland Australia
    Posts
    1,445
    Quote Originally Posted by zalbard View Post
    They will apparently sell for 999, though, what a rip off.
    Ugh pass.

    -PB
    -Project Sakura-
    Intel i7 860 @ 4.0Ghz, Asus Maximus III Formula, 8GB G-Skill Ripjaws X F3 (@ 1600Mhz), 2x GTX 295 Quad SLI
    2x 120GB OCZ Vertex 2 RAID 0, OCZ ZX 1000W, NZXT Phantom (Pink), Dell SX2210T Touch Screen, Windows 8.1 Pro

    Koolance RP-401X2 1.1 (w/ Swiftech MCP35X), XSPC EX420, XSPC X-Flow 240, DT Sniper, EK-FC 295s (w/ RAM Blocks), Enzotech M3F Mosfet+NB/SB

  5. #80
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Posts
    338


    Titan Black Edition, has new GPU version, look at Picture.

  6. #81
    I am Xtreme FlanK3r's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    Czech republic
    Posts
    6,823
    lol (text screenshot)
    ROG Power PCs - Intel and AMD
    CPUs:i9-7900X, i9-9900K, i7-6950X, i7-5960X, i7-8086K, i7-8700K, 4x i7-7700K, i3-7350K, 2x i7-6700K, i5-6600K, R7-2700X, 4x R5 2600X, R5 2400G, R3 1200, R7-1800X, R7-1700X, 3x AMD FX-9590, 1x AMD FX-9370, 4x AMD FX-8350,1x AMD FX-8320,1x AMD FX-8300, 2x AMD FX-6300,2x AMD FX-4300, 3x AMD FX-8150, 2x AMD FX-8120 125 and 95W, AMD X2 555 BE, AMD x4 965 BE C2 and C3, AMD X4 970 BE, AMD x4 975 BE, AMD x4 980 BE, AMD X6 1090T BE, AMD X6 1100T BE, A10-7870K, Athlon 845, Athlon 860K,AMD A10-7850K, AMD A10-6800K, A8-6600K, 2x AMD A10-5800K, AMD A10-5600K, AMD A8-3850, AMD A8-3870K, 2x AMD A64 3000+, AMD 64+ X2 4600+ EE, Intel i7-980X, Intel i7-2600K, Intel i7-3770K,2x i7-4770K, Intel i7-3930KAMD Cinebench R10 challenge AMD Cinebench R15 thread Intel Cinebench R15 thread

  7. #82
    Xtreme Mentor
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    France - Bx
    Posts
    2,601
    Quote Originally Posted by PedantOne View Post
    [/img]http://abload.de/img/kokotiskocyu5q.jpg[/img]

    Titan Black Edition, has new GPU version, look at Picture.
    Oh, you're Czech like OBR and you don't know him ? You're a complete noob or do you think people are dumb ?

  8. #83
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Posts
    338
    Sorry, i am not Czech. Why?

    PS. Titan clocks are: 889 MHz/980 MHz Boost

  9. #84
    Xtreme Mentor
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Devon
    Posts
    3,437
    Quote Originally Posted by PedantOne View Post
    Sorry, i am not Czech. Why?

    PS. Titan clocks are: 889 MHz/980 MHz Boost
    Are you Slovakian then

    Anyway we all know you are OBR in disguise but it doesn't bother me at all. At least sometimes you have some legit info and I've learned to look through your bias
    RiG1: Ryzen 7 1700 @4.0GHz 1.39V, Asus X370 Prime, G.Skill RipJaws 2x8GB 3200MHz CL14 Samsung B-die, TuL Vega 56 Stock, Samsung SS805 100GB SLC SDD (OS Drive) + 512GB Evo 850 SSD (2nd OS Drive) + 3TB Seagate + 1TB Seagate, BeQuiet PowerZone 1000W

    RiG2: HTPC AMD A10-7850K APU, 2x8GB Kingstone HyperX 2400C12, AsRock FM2A88M Extreme4+, 128GB SSD + 640GB Samsung 7200, LG Blu-ray Recorder, Thermaltake BACH, Hiper 4M880 880W PSU

    SmartPhone Samsung Galaxy S7 EDGE
    XBONE paired with 55'' Samsung LED 3D TV

  10. #85
    Xtreme Mentor
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Ankara Turkey
    Posts
    2,631
    while i remember obr i can't remember what happened?


    When i'm being paid i always do my job through.

  11. #86
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Posts
    1,970
    Quote Originally Posted by kromosto View Post
    while i remember obr i can't remember what happened?
    I barely remember but I remember thinking it wasn't something too terribly important. I couldn't honestly care much less who the info comes from if it sounds reasonable and oftentimes is correct .

  12. #87
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Posts
    1,970
    I'm gonna go off the deep end here with a detailed guesswork at what we might see with GM200 at 20nm. THE RESULTS AND MATH IS THEORETICAL ONLY; THIS IS NOT BASED ON ANY SECRETLY-KNOWN INFO FOR UNRELEASED PRODUCTS. So rumor sites, don't post this up as anything if it's even half-sensible like I think. Feel free to use for a base of your own speculations the idea here, of course.



    This slide says the case for Maxwell's first generation is reportedly, for the same performance level we should be seeing half the wattage used even on 28nm, and that per-core we are going to see a 35% gain (by their claims, at this point of course). So a card that would take Kepler 300w can be done in a 150w or less envelope is their claim, on 28nm even. That leaves a huge amount of extra power to continue stuffing in more cores and increasing clocks. Now add in that the Big Maxwell is going to be (GM200/204) on 20nm, and that improves power efficiency and die size usable even further. Now add in that this is Maxwell FIRST generation, for the GM107, and that GM200/204 are SECOND generation by all known info.... and we have a recipe for easily doubling the performance at least, if their claims are anywhere near true.

    So, time for some math based on the theoretical and what is a real product launching in a couple of days (GTX 750 Ti).

    GM107 has 5 SMM units containing 128 cuda cores, in each GPC. One GPC is what GM107 is using. It uses 60 watts for performance that is only beaten out by a GTX 660 by about 12% per the leaked benches. A GTX 660 has 960 Kepler cores, while a GM107 has 640 Maxwell cores. A GTX 660 uses a TDP rating of 140 watts. See an interesting number here?

    960 is 50% more cores than the 640 ones Maxwell is using for the 750Ti. Now, it is around 12% slower there.... see the magic number close by? Nvidia claims a 35% performance increase PER CORE and additionally that the cores there will use only around half the power overall in TDP. Now extrapolate on some napkin math: the GM107 only has a 128-bit bus. That means the bandwidth efficiency is greatly improved because a GTX 650 Ti Boost is a huge amount above a GTX 650 Ti (192-bit vs. 128-bit bus widths and basically the same otherwise).

    So it's safe to say that with 50% more bandwidth and 50% more cores, a GTX 660 only performing ~12% higher than a Maxwell part with slightly higher clocks is incredibly impressive. Now let's scale! We know at 28nm lithography that GM107 is around 148 square millimeters for the die size. Let's COMPLETELY IGNORE 20NM for a second here on the power savings and size! Forget about it for a minute. It would be extremely easy to see, since even on 28nm the reticule size is around 570mm2, that they could use 3 GPC units on 28nm taking around 420-430mm2 with this imaginary chip that would have 15 SMM units. 15 SMM units times 128 per unit would mean 1920 Maxwell cores.

    Pretend their scheduler is great and the performance scales well with core count and clocks, and that they kept the idea of triple everything there in this hypothetical, non-existent card that is an illustration only. So we'd have a 384 bit bus with 1920 Maxwell cores, probably 7ghz memory speed of GDDR5 like Kepler does at least, and a TDP that fits inside of 200 watts. Now let's say that you only get about 75% scaling from core count here, which is reasonable even though Kepler scales pretty linearly, but it's a new architecture with Maxwell, so let's make the safe assumption. So a GTX 660 performs 12% better than a GM107 with 640 cores. Triple the core count there with our rough napkin math again with everything else and you would have a card performing around the same as GK110 fully unlocked by that theory-crafting, at least, and it has better potential for higher clocks thanks to the lower power usage.

    However, in reality, we know they are going 20nm. This allows for even more power savings. This also allows for many more transistors per square mm on the die. So pretend they want to go for a 520mm2 chip on 20nm, keep costs down a tad for Big Maxwell and improve yields per wafer. According to released documents such as this: http://www.cadence.com/rl/Resources/...ew/20nm_qa.pdf we can expect to see transistor counts possible of 8-12 billion. GK110 is 7.1 billion transistors. Using that as a point of reference, let's scale 28nm GK110 to 28nm Maxwell GM107: we need less memory controllers and pad space, so we can safely come up with a number in the neighborhood, considering the 148mm2 die size compared to GK110's 551mm2 size. At 20nm, you will be able to fit upwards of 11-12 billion transistors for a high-end part. For 28nm the 148mm2 die size indicates roughly 1.7-1.8 billion transistors with the 128-bit bus.

    So now we have a decent number here: we know that Maxwell at 28nm in GM107 form is taking about 2 billion transistors to perform at a level about 89% as fast as a GK106. Let's use this as a base for the next part of this thought exercise .

    So 2 billion.... it's safe to say they could fit 7 GPC's at 20nm easily since 20nm should provide roughly a 2x density shrink in die size used per transistor, very easily, and we wouldn't need to duplicate memory controllers beyond 3x of the 28nm design's if we went for a 384-bit bus. At 20nm let's say they went for a 384-bit bus, to feed 7 GPC's worth of cores since the architecture is more bandwidth-efficient than Kepler, clearly by far. That'd give us 4480 Maxwell cores which already are much more bandwidth-efficient, so it probably would be plenty well-fed on that end of things.

    Power-wise we'd be looking at an envelope of, 250 watts since Maxwell GM107 at 28nm takes a full-card power of 60w for 640 cores. That means probably around 45w for the GPU itself, allowing 10w for the GDDR5 and 5w for the fan and other circuitry. The move to 20nm will improve power efficiency drastically, due to the shorter gate lengths. So it's fair to say they could fit seven of those inside of that envelope, more than easily.

    Again, let's go for a linear scaling factor of approximately 75% for the core count improvements... so we have a GTX 660 GK106 card we will use and compare to a GK110 780 Ti. A GTX 660 at 1080p is able to pull about 50% of the performance of a fully-unlocked, 780 Ti (source: http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/N...780_Ti/27.html).

    Now we know each SMM will provide around 90% of that performance, and revision 2.0 (second gen) on 20nm will probably be closer to a 100% figure. So let's conservatively say each SMM-based GPC results in a real-world performance of a GTX 660. In other words, around half of a 780 Ti. Now let's conservatively also say we only see the benefit of 75% of the cores when scaling it to 7 GPC's or 35 SMM's. 35 SMM's would be, as you recall 4480 maxwell cores. Multiply the performance of the 50% card by 7 and we'd have 350% (or 2.5x faster than) of the performance of a full GK110. However, let's now apply the 75% rough rule and we come up with a much more reasonable 262.5% of the performance, or 2.6x as fast as (1.6x faster than) a GTX 780 Ti.

    My predictions, therefore, are that we will see a Big Maxwell on 20nm with at minimum twice the performance of a GTX 780 Ti, and by current rumors it is due this year. Add in that Maxwell will be able to clock higher at 20nm (I based those power figures off of the numbers above which were of a card at 28nm with a 1085mhz GPU clock, and realistically they can probably fit a stock core speed of 1100-1150mhz of this big a chip in then. Thus my predictions are we would see a 450-460mm2 die size for this hypothetical card, at 20nm, with a 250-260w TDP rating and thanks to the 2x transistor density, approximately 9.2b transistors.

    Napkin math, for sure, but worth thinking about, eh?

  13. #88
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    Switzerland
    Posts
    1,972
    WHen i read this type of theory, i understand why Nvid?a launch a low end range product first with maxwell lol .. ( 1st generation ofc ) ...


    But i think you are a little bit in the sad side.. 300% performance gain on the minimum..
    Last edited by Lanek; 02-15-2014 at 06:24 PM.
    CPU: - I7 4930K (EK Supremacy )
    GPU: - 2x AMD HD7970 flashed GHZ bios ( EK Acetal Nickel Waterblock H2o)
    Motherboard: Asus x79 Deluxe
    RAM: G-skill Ares C9 2133mhz 16GB
    Main Storage: Samsung 840EVO 500GB / 2x Crucial RealSSD C300 Raid0

  14. #89
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Posts
    1,970
    Quote Originally Posted by Lanek View Post
    WHen i read this type of theory, i understand why Nvid?a launch a low end range product first with maxwell lol .. ( 1st generation ofc ) ...


    But i think you are a little bit in the sad side.. 300% performance gain on the minimum..

    ??? 300% gain would mean 4x the performance. I said at minimum we will probably see twice the performance of GK110 full (780 ti) in a Big Maxwell on 20nm. Please actually read before replying with completely wrong info about what's written very plainly in the post you're replying to . I'm not sure if you were reading another post but if so you should refer to who you're talking to. Personally, I wrote the below:

    My predictions, therefore, are that we will see a Big Maxwell on 20nm with at minimum twice the performance of a GTX 780 Ti
    Last edited by GoldenTiger; 02-16-2014 at 12:35 AM.

  15. #90
    I am Xtreme
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    France
    Posts
    9,060
    I think you are being overly optimistic there, GoldenTiger. Performance doubling with every new generation is a thing of the past...
    Donate to XS forums
    Quote Originally Posted by jayhall0315 View Post
    If you are really extreme, you never let informed facts or the scientific method hold you back from your journey to the wrong answer.

  16. #91
    Xtreme Member EternityZX9's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Nursing Student -or- Beta Testing Escape From Tarkov
    Posts
    421
    Quote Originally Posted by zalbard View Post
    I think you are being overly optimistic there, GoldenTiger. Performance doubling with every new generation is a thing of the past...
    I don't know. Nvidia seems to have a track record for surprising us over the past 10 years - especially for new architectures. I'm personally expecting a pretty significant jump in performance with the Flagship card.

  17. #92
    Xtreme Mentor
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Posts
    2,554
    Quote Originally Posted by EternityZX9 View Post
    I don't know. Nvidia seems to have a track record for surprising us over the past 10 years - especially for new architectures. I'm personally expecting a pretty significant jump in performance with the Flagship card.
    Yeah, they've managed to at least match (usually surpass) the previous generations dual gpu card with their single gpu flagships.

    If they lead with the mainstream gpu again I'll wait though.

  18. #93
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Colorado Springs
    Posts
    1,173
    No! This will be a weak overpriced release.....the price is validated so high from the first titan....then next titan will again kick ass...like a tick tock effect.

    but i'm just making up shart out of the thin air like most of you :P
    1

  19. #94
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Portland
    Posts
    132
    Does anyone know if they have a hydro copper waterblock designed for the titan black?
    Under the hood:
    Motherboard - MSI Big Bang Xpower
    CPU - Intel Core I7 970 3.2 @ 4.4ghz/w 1.28vcore
    Cooler- Intel Stock Heatsink
    RAM - Gskill Trident 3x2gb @ 2100 cl9
    GPU -2x Nvidia GTX 580 SLI
    Soundcard - Creative xfi xtremegamer
    DVDRW - LG 22x DVD RW Drive
    Samsung Spinpoint f3 500gb HDD
    Tower- MM Ascension CYO Brushed Aluminum
    Monitor - Sony Bravia 40" LED 1080p 120hz
    Keyboard - Razer Tarantula
    Mouse - Logitech G5

  20. #95
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Location
    North Queensland Australia
    Posts
    1,445
    Quote Originally Posted by Zaxis01 View Post
    Does anyone know if they have a hydro copper waterblock designed for the titan black?
    Yep EVGA has em on the website.

    -PB
    -Project Sakura-
    Intel i7 860 @ 4.0Ghz, Asus Maximus III Formula, 8GB G-Skill Ripjaws X F3 (@ 1600Mhz), 2x GTX 295 Quad SLI
    2x 120GB OCZ Vertex 2 RAID 0, OCZ ZX 1000W, NZXT Phantom (Pink), Dell SX2210T Touch Screen, Windows 8.1 Pro

    Koolance RP-401X2 1.1 (w/ Swiftech MCP35X), XSPC EX420, XSPC X-Flow 240, DT Sniper, EK-FC 295s (w/ RAM Blocks), Enzotech M3F Mosfet+NB/SB

Page 4 of 4 FirstFirst 1234

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •