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NVIDIA GP107 GPU Built on Samsung 14 nm Node?

btarunr

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Could the upcoming "GP107" ASIC by NVIDIA be its first on the 14 nanometer silicon fabrication process? That's what 3DCenter.org uncovered. Informed sources tell the German tech-site that the GP107 could be the first GPU built by NVIDIA's partnership with Samsung Electronics, after it emerged that the Korean silicon giant could manufacture certain GeForce "Pascal" GPUs on its 14 nm LPP (low-power plus) node. There's also talk of NVIDIA optical-shrinking its existing GeForce Pascal chips to 14 nm, built by Samsung.

The GP107 silicon will power two known mid-range desktop SKUs slated for launch later this month, the GeForce GTX 1050 Ti, and the GTX 1050. Bound for mid-October, the GTX 1050 Ti features 768 CUDA cores, 48 TMUs, 32 ROPs, and a 128-bit GDDR5 memory interface holding 4 GB of memory; with GPU clocks above the 1.50 GHz mark. The GTX 1050, on the other hand, could launch in late-October, featuring 640 CUDA cores, 40 TMUs, 32 ROPs, and 2 GB of GDDR5 memory across the chip's 128-bit memory interface, with the possibility of custom-design 4 GB SKUs. NVIDIA is targeting the $150 and $120 price-points with these SKUs. The company could also work on mobile SKUs based on the chip.

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Maxwell goes for the 4th generation.. talk about nGreedia, lol
 
GM100 -> 750/Ti
GM200 -> Titan, 980/Ti,970,960,950
GM300 -> Titan, 1080, 1070, 1060
GM400 -> 1050 and a rumored refresh of Pascwell

GTX 1000 series are all Pascal so I'm not sure what you're talking about yet...
 
GTX 1000 series are all Pascal so I'm not sure what you're talking about yet...

People just wanna believe Nvidia is doing shady stuff, as always. Nobody should be treated respectfully after saying "ngreedia" in an age where the top product in price-performance charts is a green one.
This whole generation is built out of fresh cores, yet someone will find something to b@#ch about.

WCCF is this way >>>
 
Maxwell goes for the 4th generation.. talk about nGreedia, lol

So does amd
GCN 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3
Fundamentally, architecture is still more or less the same as it was in 2011
 
GM100 -> 750/Ti
GM200 -> Titan, 980/Ti,970,960,950
GM300 -> Titan, 1080, 1070, 1060
GM400 -> 1050 and a rumored refresh of Pascwell

Pascal CUDA core architecture is based on Maxwell CUDA core architecture
But other optimizations are performed
1_16nm FinFet node
2_Architectural Optimizations for higher clock
3_Improved Asynchronous compute
4_Fourth generation Delta Color Compression
I think Pascal architecture is not just a simple Die-Shrink of the Maxwell
 
GTX 1000 series are all Pascal so I'm not sure what you're talking about yet...

Pascal is Maxwell on 16nm with a few marketing rings and bells. They're identical at the same specs. Check it out for yourself.

 
Pascal is Maxwell on 16nm with a few marketing rings and bells. They're identical at the same specs. Check it out for yourself.


Because youtube is a great source for tech facts...
 
I think it makes good business sense for Nvidia pursuing a relationship with Samsung. They don't want to be stuck on 16nm in 2019 when AMD rolls out 7nm Navi.
 
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