Sneak peek at performance

When Nvidia unveiled its GeForce Titan X graphics card at the 2015 Game Developers Conference (GDC) last week, company CEO Jen-Hsun Huang revealed almost nothing about the part, other than to say it has 12GB of onboard memory and 8 billion transistors. There was no mention of other specs, let alone benchmarks, though information across the board has begun to leak on the web, including a first look at how the Titan X performs.
Bearing in mind that none of this is official, the folks at Videocardz.com report that Titan X sports 3,072 CUDA cores, 192 TMUs, 96 ROPs, 1,002MHz core clockspeed (boost is unknown), 1,750MHz memory clock, and a 384-bit memory bus resulting in 336GB/s of bandwidth.
The site also reports there are three mini DisplayPorts, a single DisplayPort, and an HDMI port, along with 6-pin and 8-pin (one each) PCI-E power connectors.
As for the benchmarks, they show the Titan X scoring 22,903 in 3DMark 11 using the Performance setting and 26,444 when overclocked. Both are lower scores than AMD's Radeon R9295X2 (28,930), though they blow the Titan (13,814) and Titan Black (14,557) out of the water.
This is really disappointing at first look and is not a very healthy sign for the upcoming flagship card for Nvidia who has already run into rough waters with its GTX 970 memory sham and a law suit that followed. AMD on the other hand is already geared up for it upcoming 3xxx series GPUs. The future of gaming is sure going to be very interesting and we'll keep you updated as and when any news pops up.





This is an interesting early look at the Titan X, especially how expectations were high but the benchmark results seem mixed compared to AMD. It shows how performance details and real-world results matter more than just specs on paper. Tech users always want clear and reliable information before making decisions.
ReplyDeleteIn a similar way, people prefer simple and accurate tools in daily life too. While checking useful online services, I came across rta check fine and it reminded me how quick access to information makes things easier. Just like benchmarks guide tech choices, clear tools help users stay informed and avoid confusion.
This is an interesting early look at the Titan X, especially how expectations were high but the benchmark results seem mixed compared to AMD. It shows how performance details and real-world results matter more than just specs on paper. Tech users always want clear and reliable information before making decisions.
DeleteIn a similar way, people prefer simple and accurate tools in daily life too. While checking useful online services, I came across rta check fine and it reminded me how quick access to information makes things easier. Just like benchmarks guide tech choices, clear tools help users stay informed and avoid confusion.