Nvidia’s silicon accomplice, TSMC, have simply introduced they are going to be getting into volume production of 12nm FinFET chips within the fourth quarter of 2017. That’s the lithography they’re utilizing for the gaming-focused Nvidia Volta GPUs, making an early 2018 launch of their next-gen GPUs an actual risk.
That’s a very long time to attend, however what’s the best graphics card to purchase proper now?
The first Nvidia Volta GPUs have already rolled off the production line and into the palms of the professionals. Those are the hyper-expensive Tesla V100 chips although, not the kinds of graphics silicon prone to discover their manner into our gaming rigs.
The precise Volta GPUs us normies are going to have the ability to purchase gained’t fairly be the parallel processor monster the 5,376 core Tesla is, however they’re nonetheless liable to be pretty chunky chips nonetheless. TSMC have produced the 12nm FinFET chips for the pro-level playing cards, however these may have solely been in very restricted volumes.
The high-volume 12nm FinFET components are as a consequence of begin going into mass manufacturing on the finish of this 12 months, and that might point out a 2018 launch for the brand new Nvidia Volta graphics playing cards.
If I had been a playing man (I’d go by the title of Gamblor) I’d be tempted to place a few pennies on Nvidia releasing their new playing cards in March subsequent 12 months.
It’s going to be attention-grabbing to see what sort of method Nvidia have taken in designing the extra consumer-facing aspect of the Volta structure. The new AMD RX Vega 64 playing cards have launched at present, utilizing the AMD’s latest Vega GPU architecure, and have seemingly prioritised the structure’s future efficiency over current-gen API gaming efficiency.
Will Volta do the identical, or will Nvidia be concentrating on each?
Source