NVIDIA unveils its new Quadro graphics cards – all we need to know

Today NVIDIA announced a new line of Quadro products based on the Pascal architecture. With its new graphics cards the company aims to provide enough power to workstations so that they can compete even with a supercomputer.

The fast growing complexity and size of data which designers and engineers use nowadays ask for an even faster-improving working environment. Here is where the Quadro lineup comes in handy – in photorealism, virtual reality, and deep learning technologies where a lot of computing power is needed. The new graphics cards provide up to twice the performance of the previous generation and ultra-fast memory.

You can check all currently available NVIDIA graphics cards here: http://amzn.to/2lg9RBu

Bob Pette, vice president of Professional Visualization at NVIDIA says: “Professional workflows are now infused with artificial intelligence, virtual reality and photorealism, creating new challenges for our most demanding users… Our new Quadro lineup provides the graphics and compute performance required to address these challenges. And, by unifying compute and design, the Quadro GP100 transforms the average desktop workstation with the power of a supercomputer.”

Below are listed the benefits on the new NVIDIA’s Quadro Pascal Visual Computing Platform. Graphics cards part from this platform: GP100, P4000, P2000, P1000, P600, P400, as well as the already announced P6000, P5000 and their mobile versions.

  • Unify simulation, HPC, rendering and design – The GP100 combines unprecedented double precision performance with 16GB of high-bandwidth memory (HBM2) so users can conduct simulations during the design process and gather realistic multiphysics simulations faster than ever before. Customers can combine two GP100 GPUs with NVLink technology and scale to 32GB of HBM2 to create a massive visual computing solution on a single workstation.
  • Explore deep learning – The GP100 provides more than 20 TFLOPS of 16-bit floating point precision computing, making it an ideal development platform to enable deep learning in Windows and Linux environments.
  • Incorporate VR into design and simulation workflows – The “VR Ready” Quadro GP100 and P4000 have the power to create detailed, lifelike, immersive environments. Larger, more complex designs can be experienced at scale
  • Reap the benefits of photorealistic design – Pascal-based Quadro GPUs can render photorealistic images more than 18 times faster than a CPU.
  • Create expansive visual workspaces – Visualize data in high resolution and HDR color on up to four 5K displays.
  • Build massive digital signage configurations cost effectively – Up to 32 4K displays can be configured through a single chassis by combining up to eight P4000 GPUs and two Quadro Sync II cards.

There is no information about pricing and availability of the graphics cards yet. We have to mention that the Quadro series are designed to satisfy the needs of professionals which need that extra horsepower to render 3D animation and perform other graphically intense tasks. NVIDIA has the GeForce lineup for normal users and gamers.

You can check all NVIDIA graphics cards here: http://amzn.to/2lg9RBu

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