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Nvidia has unleashed the TITAN V, the first Volta powered TITAN graphics card

It looks like Nvidia is keeping us on our toes. Just when we thought the company was done with new GPU launches for the year, Nvidia turned around and launched the TITAN V, the first Volta-based Titan graphics card. It's got 21.1 billion transistors and delivers 110 teraflops of computational power, making it nine times faster than the Titan Xp.

While for the past few years Nvidia has leaned towards marketing the Titan as a gaming card, this is not the case this time around. For starters, the TITAN V is a $3000 GPU but the most telling part is the fact that it was announced at the annual NIPS conference, with the promise of turning your PC into an AI Supercomputer.

Speaking about Nvidia's goals with the Volta architecture, CEO Jensen Huang said: “Our vision for Volta was to push the outer limits of high performance computing and AI. We broke new ground with its new processor architecture, instructions, numerical formats, memory architecture and processor links. With TITAN V, we are putting Volta into the hands of researchers and scientists all over the world. I can’t wait to see their breakthrough discoveries.”

With the Volta architecture, Nvidia has redesigned the streaming multiprocessor, making it twice as energy efficient compared to Pascal. This enables huge boost to performance per watt. Volta also packs Tensor Cores, which are key to pushing the 110 teraflop computational power found on the TITAN V.

Finally, the TITAN V also backs 12GB of HBM2 memory for advanced memory bandwidth utilization. The announcement of the TITAN V comes just days after Nvidia revealed that it would be releasing AI software for TITAN users to tinker with at home.

KitGuru Says: This announcement came out of nowhere, with zero leaks beforehand. However, the TITAN is clearly a workstation card this time around, with the main focus being on pushing forward AI development and machine learning.

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10 comments

  1. It doesn’t support SLI at all

  2. NVLink

  3. Nope. Been debunked already. That link is for tesla cards

  4. There was a mistake on one of the original press releases, which led to the confusion. Nvidia has since confirmed that there is no SLI support.

  5. Do you really need SLI on a card that’s 9 times faster than the previous TITAN card? 😛

  6. It’s not 9 times faster because the quoted floating point precision isn’t the same. Deep learning uses a different precision than games rendering.

    Fact is, 5120 CUDA against 3840 CUDA at the same GPU clockspeed would result in an “up to” performance scale equal to the ratio of cores, or 33%.

  7. Yeah, that is tensor performance only. In FP16, FP32 and FP64 it’d only be about 33% faster in theoretical performance like you say.

  8. Nope https://wccftech.com/nvidia-titan-v-volta-gaming-benchmarks/

  9. I hope you didn’t just read the title, since the article indicates both an expected 30-something percent scaling of Fire Strike against the 70-something gain in Unigine Superposition at 1080p– and we’re still at this resolution. Neither of which are 9x times faster, nor justify the 3000 dollar A.I. card for gaming.

    So how many games scale Unigine Superposition? Those that play only those games will have a ball.

  10. Hence why I mentioned it’s NVLink and not SLI.