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The GeForce 16 series is a series of graphics processing units (GPUs) developed by Nvidia, based on the Turing microarchitecture, announced in February 2019. [5] The 16 series, commercialized within the same timeframe as the 20 series, aims to cover the entry-level to mid-range market, not addressed by the latter.
Photo of James Clerk Maxwell, eponym of architecture. Maxwell is the codename for a GPU microarchitecture developed by Nvidia as the successor to the Kepler microarchitecture. . The Maxwell architecture was introduced in later models of the GeForce 700 series and is also used in the GeForce 800M series, GeForce 900 series, and Quadro Mxxx series, as well as some Jetson produ
Nvidia therefore has safely enabled asynchronous compute in Pascal's driver. [10] Instruction-level preemption. In graphics tasks, the driver restricts this to pixel-level preemption because pixel tasks typically finish quickly and the overhead costs of doing pixel-level preemption are much lower than performing instruction-level preemption.
GeForce 310 November 27, 2009 GT218 TSMC 40 nm 260 57 PCIe 2.0 x16 589 1402 1000 16:8:4 512 8 DDR2 64 2.356 4.712 44.8 30.5 OEM Card, similar to Geforce 210 GeForce 315 February 2010 GT216 486 100 475 1100 1580 48:16:4 512 12.6 DDR3 3.8 7.6 105.6 33 OEM Card, similar to Geforce GT220 GeForce GT 320 GT215 727 144 540 1302 72:24:8 1024 25.3 GDDR3
An Nvidia GeForce Go 7600 graphics chip soldered onto the motherboard of an HP Pavilion dv9000 series laptop. Since the GeForce 2 series, Nvidia has produced a number of graphics chipsets for notebook computers under the GeForce Go branding. Most of the features present in the desktop counterparts are present in the mobile ones.
Die shot of the TU104 GPU used in RTX 2080 cards Die shot of the TU106 GPU used in RTX 2060 cards Die shot of the TU116 GPU used in GTX 1660 cards. The Turing microarchitecture combines multiple types of specialized processor core, and enables an implementation of limited real-time ray tracing. [4]
Nvidia NVDEC (formerly known as NVCUVID [1]) is a feature in its graphics cards that performs video decoding, offloading this compute-intensive task from the CPU. [2] NVDEC is a successor of PureVideo and is available in Kepler and later Nvidia GPUs.
GeForce GTX 1650 Super, GTX 1660, GTX 1660 Super, GTX 1660 Ti: TU116 VP10 J February 2019 GeForce GTX 1650: TU117 VP10 J April 2019 Nvidia A100: GA100 VP10 J May 2020 GeForce RTX 3090, RTX 3080 Ti, RTX 3080: GA102 VP11 K September 2020 Introduced 8K@60 AV1 Main profile decoding GeForce RTX 3070 Ti, RTX 3070, RTX 3060 Ti: GA104 VP11 K October 2020