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donnietb | 6 years ago

Can someone elaborate on how this translates to the actual performance of GPU. What is the performance jump (will this allow to run 4k x 4k per eye VR headset) when compared to current GPU generation ?

Today Even with Nvidia 1080 cards running 2k x 2k per eye headsets is not an easy task and beyond a smooth VR experience.

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sambe|6 years ago

It's right there in the article: 1.35x. That sounds like raw speed though, with actual changes probably depending more on what people do with the new technology.

donnietb|6 years ago

It is a comparison against a 7nm along with 0.65 area die reduction.

Current Nvidia is 12 nm I believe, so the question si what is the possible pixel count bump.

baq|6 years ago

article and slides don't give baselines for those percentages: is it 35% more at fixed frequency? fixed power?

ricardobeat|6 years ago

Nearly every existing VR game runs perfectly smooth with a 2080. You won’t get 90fps 4K even with a Ti card, but for FHD we’re well served, price aside.

ksec|6 years ago

GPU scales really well with transistor count and You can expect about double the performance with best of 7nm, and likely another double for 3nm. So you are looking at 4x the performance.

Of course this does not take into account about TDP, Clockspeed, Memory Speed, Cost of Die Size etc. What is technologically possible may not be economically possible. We are going to need much faster memory, GDDR7? or HBM3, how much would those cost?

And a 3nm ( Whether that is from Samsung or TSMC ) Nvidia GPU will likely be 2022 or 2023 at the earliest.

imtringued|6 years ago

More transistors require more energy. GPUs are already at 300W. Doubling the number of transistors means double the power consumption which means 600W. Smaller transistors are more energy efficient but they can't reduce the energy needed per doubling by 50%. Therefore you end up with a 400W GPU. That's still too high. Energy efficiency is now far more important than raw transistor count.

blattimwind|6 years ago

> And a 3nm ( Whether that is from Samsung or TSMC ) Nvidia GPU will likely be 2022 or 2023.

That seems really optimistic to me.

solotronics|6 years ago

There is heat dissipation to consider as well so you can't just make a die 4x more dense.