NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3000 Series Release Date, Price, Specs
Much like how they did with
Volta, Nvidia announced
Ampere for Data Centers without mentioning consumer GPUs at all. Although the RTX 2000 series wasn’t built on Volta, it still played a role in developing the
Turing architecture, which was the first product to use Tensor Cores, which are instrumental in the RTX 2000 series.
For this reason, many believed that the RTX 3000 series wasn’t going to based on Ampere, but that was not the case.
The Nvidia GeForce RTX 3000 series cards are coming up very soon. In fact, the RTX 3080 and RTX 3090 will be released later this month while the RTX 3070 will be released in October.
Seeing how these upcoming cards are a major upgrade for the RTX 2000 series, you should probably wait a little if you are looking to boost your PC’s performance.
There are rumors circulating regarding an entry-level RTX 3060 GPU but take those with a grain of salt.
AMD should be commended for its success in having its graphics chips included in next-generation gaming consoles, which will feature 4K gaming. However, it seems that Nvidia will offer PC gamers vastly superior performance with the RTX 3090 being a viable option for 8K gaming.
If you wish to purchase one of the cards, you can check out our
Pre-Order section at the bottom of the page. There are reports suggesting that the RTX 3000 GPUs will be in short supply until 2021 so you need to act fast if you wish to get one early.
Much like how they did with
Volta, Nvidia announced
Ampere for Data Centers without mentioning consumer GPUs at all. Although the RTX 2000 series wasn’t built on Volta, it still played a role in developing the
Turing architecture, which was the first product to use Tensor Cores, which are instrumental in the RTX 2000 series.
For this reason, many believed that the RTX 3000 series wasn’t going to based on Ampere, but that was not the case.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang has previously stated that their next generation of GPUs will all use the 7nm manufacturing process, that’s not the case as Nvidia will be using Samsung’s 8nm process. This is the same process used for Exynos 9820 which was used in Samsung’s Galaxy S10 phones.
As this is an adapted 10nm process, it doesn’t increase transistor density by too much. Although this is still an improvement over the RTX 2000 series’ 12nm process, it’s still behind AMD’s 7nm. Regardless, even with a 12nm node, Nvidia managed to handily outperform whatever AMD and their 7nm process had to offer.
ostatak članka:
https://www.gpumag.com/nvidia-geforce-rtx-3000-series/