NVIDIA and AIC partners finally started preparations for a new generation of GeForce game cards. They are expected to meet with us from August to September and will be half a year slower than usual.
So far, NVIDIA has not disclosed any specific details of the next-generation game cards. Even the name GeForce 11 series or GeForce 20 series is a mystery, but this does not prevent the flow of various rumours, especially the two or three from now on. In the month, there will be more and more such news. Of course, it is not easy to tell whether it is true or not.
From the current point of view, although NVIDIA has many new architectures, including Volta, Ampere, and Turing, The next generation game card should use Turing The other two are for professional fields.
The latest exposure said, Turing architecture will once again completely change the way the GPU core frequency operates, with a new architecture design.
The NVIDIA GPU was divided into core frequency, Shader shader frequency, Shader frequency was canceled, core frequency was benchmarked, acceleration was different, and it was more flexible.
Don't know how it will evolve next? Is it a powerful acceleration? Or something else? Temporarily ignorant, but in any case, will inevitably bring about a further increase in performance, power consumption and heat control will be more flexible.
In addition, The Turing architecture will support new video output methods, but given that the GeForce 10 series already supports DisplayPort 1.4, it is likely to join HDMI 2.1.
The HDMI 2.1 standard was released six months ago. The bandwidth has soared to 48Gbps. It can fully support lossless video with resolutions and refresh rates of 4K/120Hz, 8K/60Hz, 10K, etc., and supports dynamic HDR at the same time. New standards have been adopted for this. Ultra High Speed HDMI Cable with ultra-low electromagnetic radiation, and still maintains backward compatibility, also supports eARC (audio return channel), variable refresh rate (VRR), fast media switching ( QMS, Quick Frame Transfer (QFT), Automatic Low-Delay Mode (ALLM), and other new features can be said to vary greatly.
Finally, what do you like about the GeForce 11 series or the GeForce 20 series?