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On April 29, 2012, the GTX 690 was announced as the first dual-GPU Kepler product. [15] On May 10, 2012, the GTX 670 was officially announced. [16] On June 4, 2012, the GTX 680M was officially announced. [17] On August 16, 2012, the GTX 660 Ti was officially announced. [18] On September 13, 2012, the GTX 660 and GTX 650 were officially ...
GeForce GTX 275 April 9, 2009 GT200-105-B3 TSMC/UMC 55 nm 470 633 1404 2.268 240:80:28 896 (1792) 127.0 17.724 50.6 674 219 Effectively one-half of the GTX 295 $250 GeForce GTX 280 June 17, 2008 GT200-300-A2 65 nm 576 602 1296 2.214 240:80:32 1024 141.7 512 19.264 48.16 622 236 Replaced by GTX 285 $650 (dropped to $430 after 3 months [54])
GeForce GTX 650 Ti, GTX 660, GTX 670MX, GTX 675MX, GTX 760M, GTX 765M, GTX 770M: GK106 VP5 D September 2012 - GeForce GTX 780, GTX 780 Ti, GTX TITAN, GTX TITAN BLACK, GTX TITAN Z: GK110 VP5 D February 2013 - GeForce GT 630 rev. 2, GT 635, GT 640 rev. 2, GT 710, GT 720, GT 730 (GDDR5), GT 730M, GT 735M, GT 740M: GK208 VP5 D April 2013 -
With the GTX Titan, Nvidia also released GPU Boost 2.0, which would allow the GPU clock speed to increase indefinitely until a user-set temperature limit was reached without passing a user-specified maximum fan speed. The final GeForce 600 series release was the GTX 650 Ti BOOST based on the GK106 core, in response to AMD's Radeon HD 7790 release.
The Nvidia GeForce GTX 745, 750 and 750 Ti from the 7xx desktop GPU family would not be affected by this change. In Windows ,the last driver to fully support CUDA with 64-Bit Compute Capability 3.5 for Kepler in Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 64-bit is 388.71, tested with latest CUDA-Z and GPU-Z, after that driver, the 64-Bit CUDA support becomes ...
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.
Drivers without freely (and legally) -available source code are commonly known as binary drivers. Binary drivers used in the context of operating systems that are prone to ongoing development and change (such as Linux) create problems for end users and package maintainers. These problems, which affect system stability, security and performance ...
Driver 368.81 is the last driver to support Windows XP/Windows XP 64-bit. [citation needed] Windows XP 32-bit: 368.81 driver download; Windows XP 64-bit: 368.81 driver download; 32-bit drivers for 32-bit operating systems were discontinued after the release of driver 391.35 in March 2018. [99]