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Graphic cards
When we first told you about the NVIDIA GeForce GTX Titan video card back in February 2013, we noted that it was powered by NVIDIA’s GK110 ‘Kepler’ GPU and that one of the Streaming Multiprocessors (SMX unit) was disabled. NVIDIA followed up the launch of the GeForce GTX Titan 6GB with the more affordable GeForce GTX 780 3GB that had two more SMX units disabled at the end of May 2013. Those two cards were all that NVIDIA needed to dominate the high-end desktop graphics card market for nearly a year. Many gamers and enthusiasts forgot that a fully enabled Kepler GK110 GPU even existed. NVIDIA had certainly not forgotten, they just didn’t mention it. NVIDIA was keeping this trump card close to their chest and waiting for the right time to unleash the beast.
The NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780 Ti has all the SMX units on the GK110 GPU enabled and you have to see how it performs!
Graphic cards
NVIDIA refuse to sit ideally by and let AMD have all the limelight. They fight back today with the new GTX 780 Ti 3GB that offers quite the punch.
Graphic cards
Today Nvidia introduced the first card in its new 7 series of graphics cards, the GeForce GTX 780. Based on the name you probably expect an entirely new architecture, but the GTX 780 is based on the same GK110 GPU that's the foundation of the GeForce Titan. The new card has slightly fewer CUDA Cores (Nvidia's term for its unified shaders), somewhat less video memory and lower clock speeds.
Graphic cards
Was einst unter dem Codenamen "Titan LE" durch das Internet geisterte, manifestiert sich nun in Form der Geforce GTX 780. Wie viel der 900 Euro teuren GTX Titan in der 649-Euro-Karte Geforce GTX 780 steckt, klärt unser ausführlicher Test der High-End-Grafikkarte.
Graphic cards
Am heutigen Donnerstag startet NVIDIA seine neue Grafikkarten-Serie mit der Vorstellung der GeForce GTX 780. Die GTX-700-Serie soll dabei nach und nach die bisherigen Modelle der GTX-600-Serie ablösen. Was es für Neuerungen gibt und wie sich die GTX 780 in der Praxis schlägt, dass verrät unser Testbericht.
Graphic cards
Nvidia erteilt den Startschuss für die GeForce-GTX-700-Serie. Den Anfang macht das Flaggschiff GeForce GTX 780, ein Ableger der außerordentlich erfolgreichen GTX Titan.
Graphic cards
NVIDIA's GeForce GTX TITAN allowed gamers to challenge any video game they choose with the highest quality settings possible, but in limited supply and high price tag. For many players, their games really only needed half as much power and memory from a video card. Enter NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780: built from GTX TITAN to deliver 3GB of GDDR5 video frame buffer memory, and 2304 CUDA cores from the GK110 GPU that reach 900 MHz using NVIDIA Boost 2.0 technology. In this article, Benchmark Reviews tests and compares the NVIDIA GeForce GTX 780 graphics card using several highly-demanding DX11 video games, such as Metro: Last Light, Batman: Arkham City, and Battlefield 3.
Graphic cards
Mit der GeForce GTX 780 präsentiert Nvidia die kleine Version der GeForce Titan. Wir haben getestet was man zum ausgerufenen Preis von etwa 650 Euro zu erwarten hat.
Graphic cards
We overclock NVIDIA's new GeForce GTX 780 video card to see just what kind of performance we can get out the new GPU. It has the $999 GTX TITAN in its view.
Graphic cards
Its that time of year again where NVIDIA have a new series of cards in the pipelines and as we have seen running up to today, the number of rumours and leaks that have been flying about are as profound as ever. For some this leads to pure confusion as to what is to be seen and what is complete rubbish, and for people like myself it leads to pure frustration as I know all the true facts and figures, meaning that when I see the rumours and false facts floating around I can do nothing but sit and wait until the NDA lifts to put a number of these claims to rest with the real specifications and performance figures behind the new cards.
So here we have it, the GTX 780 - the first in the new line of Kepler based 700 series cards and before we get too far into the nitty gritty of what's new in the 700 series, I want to make the following fact clear and true - the GTX 780 CANNOT be flashed in any way to effectively turn it into Titan. There are a number of reasons for this; first off, whilst both cards share the same GK110 core, the 780 has far less CUDA cores, is a different revision of the core chip and has less texture units on-board. On top of this, there is also half the amount of video memory and a number of components in the power region of the PCB are missing as the 780 does not require these as opposed to Titan.
Point out of the way, NVIDIA's new 700 series cards are here to replace the ever popular 600 series, although they are not a re-hash and re-brand of 6xx cards as some may presume. Whilst the GK110 cores may be featured on both 600 and 700 series cards, they will have subtle variances to them, mainly on the front of CUDA core count and texture filters and so forth.
So what is the 780 in relation to the 600 series cards. Whilst it may look like Titan, it is a slightly lower performing card. Titan is more geared towards users with multiple high resolution displays and thus the higher 6GB of GDDR5 memory that it encompasses. The 780 whilst still home to 3GB of GDDR5 is more aimed at users who are going to be gaming on a single screen at high resolutions with all the settings turned to 11. Over its predecessor, the GTX 680, the 780 has 50% more CUDA cores with a count of 2034, 50% more memory, up to 3GB from 2GB and overall a 34% increase in performance. Interestingly enough, GTX 580 users who upgrade to a 780 will see a whopping 70% gain in performance between the two cards and a 25-30% gain can also be found over AMD's 7970.
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