NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 rumored specs: 28GB GDDR7 on 448-bit bus, 1.5TB/sec bandwidth

Anthony Garreffa | Video Cards & GPUs | May 30, 2024 5:42 AM CDT

NVIDIA's next-generation flagship GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card is back into the rumor mill, with updated specs through new rumors.

NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 rumored specs: 28GB GDDR7 on 448-bit bus, 1.5TB/sec bandwidth

We're now expecting to see 28GB of ultra-fast GDDR7 memory on an (interesting) 448-bit memory bus, with 1.5TB/sec of memory bandwidth on the GeForce RTX 5090. There were previous rumors of a monster 512-bit memory bus for the RTX 5090, with other rumors suggesting a 384-bit memory bus, but new rumors are right in between: a 448-bit memory bus.

This means that NVIDIA's flagship GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card might not be using all of the 16 available GDDR7 memory modules, and only 14 of the memory modules instead. The 28GB of GDDR7 memory on a 448-bit memory bus will be spitting out an impressive 1568GB/sec (1.56TB/sec) which is a huge 50% upgrade in memory bandwidth over the RTX 4090, which should make for some really impressive upgrades in 4K gaming.

Continue reading: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 rumored specs: 28GB GDDR7 on 448-bit bus, 1.5TB/sec bandwidth (full post)

Pictures of MSI's new 4.5-slot GeForce RTX 4090 SUPRIM FUZION beast emerge ahead of reveal

Kosta Andreadis | Video Cards & GPUs | May 30, 2024 2:01 AM CDT

MSI announced the new MSI GeForce RTX 4090 24G SUPRIM FUZION Graphics Card in an email confirming that it and other products have won Computex 2024 awards ahead of the show. It's a 4.5-slot beast because it includes an "innovative all-in-one hybrid liquid-cooled" solution with a pump, radiator, and short pipe waterway in a single block.

Pictures of MSI's new 4.5-slot GeForce RTX 4090 SUPRIM FUZION beast emerge ahead of reveal

Ahead of its Computex reveal, German outlet Allround-PC (via Videocardz) has gotten some exclusive pictures of the new MSI GeForce RTX 4090 SUPRIM FUZION GPU and its unique design, which includes a compact cooling block with pump. You can see the copper heat sinks around the block and the pump in these new shots.

Integrating the radiator with the GPU is definitely going to turn a few heads, and we'll be doing our best to go hands-on with it at Computex and potentially review it in the near future, so stay tuned. According to the Computex Best Choice Awards, the design can deliver a "15% increase in performance compared to traditional air cooling technology."

Continue reading: Pictures of MSI's new 4.5-slot GeForce RTX 4090 SUPRIM FUZION beast emerge ahead of reveal (full post)

Coloful's all-in-one Neptune Series PC features an open case with a full-cover waterblock

Kosta Andreadis | Computer Systems | May 29, 2024 11:33 PM CDT

Colorful Technology is known for creating PC components, gaming laptops, audio products, and all-in-one gaming solutions. At Computex 2024, it's set to showcase a range of liquid-cooled products - two standouts being the unique Colorful Neptune Series all-in-one PC with an open-frame and full-cover water block and the updated COLORFUL iGame GeForce RTX 4090 Vulcan LAB.

Coloful's all-in-one Neptune Series PC features an open case with a full-cover waterblock

The Neptune Series PC is quite the looker thanks to its open design and full-cover water block that delivers liquid cooling to the CPU, other components, and the Neptune graphics card. With its sci-grey color scheme, it looks like a space station or spaceship. COLORFUL confirms that the unique all-in-one PC will ship with an Intel Core i9 processor, iGame Z790D5 Neptune i92T motherboard, and 2TB SSD.

Customers will have control over the specs when ordering, so there will be multiple variations of the Neptune Series PC. Colorful also notes that it is developing a Neptune motherboard "for the next-generation Intel Core processors," so its design will support next-generation Intel Arrow Lake CPUs.

Continue reading: Coloful's all-in-one Neptune Series PC features an open case with a full-cover waterblock (full post)

T-FORCE XTREEM DDR5-10000 memory will 'push the limits' at Computex 2024

Kosta Andreadis | RAM | May 29, 2024 10:58 PM CDT

T-FORCE, the gaming brand of memory and storage experts TEAMGROUP, is set to showcase its latest T-FORCE XTREEM DDR5 Memory Module at Computex 2024. Don't let the Fuji White and Diamond Rose colors fool you; these modules feature "exclusive overclocking performance that unlocks frequencies up to 10,000 MHz."

T-FORCE XTREEM DDR5-10000 memory will 'push the limits' at Computex 2024

T-FORCE XTREEM DDR5 Memory Modules feature 2mm aluminum alloy fin heat sinks for heat dissipation and a two-piece solid metal heat spreader. DDR5-10000 or 10,000 MHz would present quite the upgrade over the first generation of DDR5 kits and the absolute fastest DDR4 kits still out there. There's no word on latency and timings, but TEAMGROUP notes that these kits "will make their global debut" at Computex 2024 next week.

TEAMGROUP will have a range of products at the show, including the T-FORCE GE PRO Gen5 M.2 PCIe SSD and T-FORCE DARK AirFlow 5 SSD Cooler, which are two more high-speed highlights for PC gamers.

Continue reading: T-FORCE XTREEM DDR5-10000 memory will 'push the limits' at Computex 2024 (full post)

ZOTAC teases its new GAMING ZONE high-end PC gaming handheld with OLED display

Kosta Andreadis | Gaming | May 29, 2024 10:28 PM CDT

ZOTAC Technology is set to make a big splash at Computex 2024 with a range of new products and compact, all-in-one solutions for AI, gaming, and professionals. ZOTAC GAMING will be there with its latest lineup of discrete GeForce RTX 40 Series graphics cards. Demos will showcase full DLSS 3.5 with Ray Reconstruction ray tracing, AI-powered NPCs, generative tools, and even an AI chatbot.

 ZOTAC teases its new GAMING ZONE high-end PC gaming handheld with OLED display

However, for those who love PC gaming in all its forms, ZOTAC's most exciting announcement and reveal will be the new ZOTAC GAMING ZONE handheld, described as a "high-performance portable PC." The specs are a bit light, and all we have to go with is the teaser image you can see above - but we know one tasty little detail.

The ZOTAC GAMING ZONE PC gaming handheld will feature a 7-inch AMOLED multi-touch high-refresh-rate display. Actually, ZOTAC is teasing one other feature.

Continue reading: ZOTAC teases its new GAMING ZONE high-end PC gaming handheld with OLED display (full post)

NVIDIA plans 2nd AI R&D center in Taiwan, in the southern city of Kaohsiung

Anthony Garreffa | Business, Financial & Legal | May 29, 2024 9:41 PM CDT

NVIDIA is planning its second R&D center in Taiwan, with new reports suggesting that Team Green is looking at the southern city of Kaohsiung, Taiwan.

NVIDIA plans 2nd AI R&D center in Taiwan, in the southern city of Kaohsiung

The new R&D center will be partly financed by the Taiwanese government and the Ministry of Economic Affairs and its "Big+ Project" subsidies. In a new report from Ctee, we're learning that with AI leading the charge, the Ministry of Economic Affairs' "Leading Enterprise R&D Deepening Plan" (aka Big+) will encourage overseas tech companies to set up forward-looking R&D centers in Taiwan.

NVIDIA was first with the Big+ funding, setting up the first AI innovation R&D center in Neihu, Taipei, then completing its supercomputer (HPC) at the NVIDIA building in Kaohsiung Software Park towards the end of 2023, with the company providing part of the computing power for new applications and the development of AI-powered products and services.

Continue reading: NVIDIA plans 2nd AI R&D center in Taiwan, in the southern city of Kaohsiung (full post)

Samsung and Naver having issues over the leadership of Mach-1 AI chip to fight NVIDIA

Anthony Garreffa | Artificial Intelligence | May 29, 2024 9:37 PM CDT

Samsung Electronics teamed with Naver to make its next-gen Mach-1 AI accelerator, but it seems that the two South Korean companies are experiencing "discord" according to reports.

Samsung and Naver having issues over the leadership of Mach-1 AI chip to fight NVIDIA

In a new report from Chosun, we're learning that the executive officer of Naver Cloud, who is leading the Mach-1 AI accelerator project, from his own personal social media. Lee Dong-soo, CEO of Naver Cloud, said: "It was Naver who proposed to create Mach-1 first and planned its development, but now I don't even see Naver's name mentioned. I don't know how to understand this".

As for Mach-1, it's a new AI semiconductor that doesn't require HBM (High Bandwidth Memory) which is a big change to AMD and NVIDIA's various AI accelerators and AI GPUs that use the ultra-fast HBM memory standard. Mach-1 is expected to both be cheaper and more energy efficient, which makes it perfect for AI startups that require AI hardware.

Continue reading: Samsung and Naver having issues over the leadership of Mach-1 AI chip to fight NVIDIA (full post)

Microsoft's DirectSR out now, combines DLSS, FSR, and XeSS into a single API for game devs

Kosta Andreadis | Video Cards & GPUs | May 29, 2024 9:03 PM CDT

Microsoft has announced that DirectSR is now available via the Agility SDK 1.714.0-preview release for game developers working with DirectX 12. Microsoft partnered with AMD, Intel, and NVIDIA to create this new API, allowing developers to integrate all the various upscaling technologies into their games.

Microsoft's DirectSR out now, combines DLSS, FSR, and XeSS into a single API for game devs

This includes AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution (FSR), Intel XeSS, and NVIDIA DLSS Super Resolution. "These cutting-edge solutions elevate the gaming experience by boosting frame rates while maintaining exceptional visual quality," Microsoft's Joshua Tucker writes in the announcement. "Yet as the number of SR variants continues to grow, developers are in search of a common SR API that will seamlessly scale across the hardware ecosystem."

DirectSR breaks upscaling down to a common set of inputs and outputs so that a "single code path" can then plug straight into DLSS, FSR, and XeSS. With DirectSR, more PC game releases will support all three technologies at launch. It's a standalone solution that doesn't require "vendor-specific SDKs" or additional tools.

Continue reading: Microsoft's DirectSR out now, combines DLSS, FSR, and XeSS into a single API for game devs (full post)

Sabrent Docking Station Compatible with Steam Deck is now on sale, just $69.99

Anthony Garreffa | Storage | May 29, 2024 8:40 PM CDT

Sabrent's new USB Type-C 6-Port Docking Station with M.2 Port (the DS-SDNV) is currently on sale, with the company dropping $10 off its price, with a limited time deal of just $69.99.

Sabrent Docking Station Compatible with Steam Deck is now on sale, just $69.99

The new Sabrent USB Type-C 6-Port Docking Station with M.2 Port (DS-SDNV) is perfect for the Steam Deck, with the useful and stylish docking station providing connectivity to your Valve Steam Deck, ASUS ROG Ally, or other compliant USB-C devices.

It allows connectivity of up to 1000Mbps through your network, faster storage through an internal M.2 SSD slot with 5Gbps transfer speeds, multiple USB ports, and display output to 4K 60Hz in extended, or mirror mode. The Sabrent USB Type-C 6-Port Docking Station with M.2 Port (the DS-SDNV) works with Windows, Linux, and macOS, but also other USB-C devices with DisplayPort Alternative (DP Alt) mode supporting output through HDMI 2.0 (HDCP 1.4).

Continue reading: Sabrent Docking Station Compatible with Steam Deck is now on sale, just $69.99 (full post)

Two cities in Taiwan are fighting for AMD's new R&D center investment

Anthony Garreffa | Business, Financial & Legal | May 29, 2024 7:59 PM CDT

AMD will be spending over 5 billion yuan ($155 million USD or so) on a second R&D center in Taiwan, with both Tainan and Kaohsiung "actively seeking" AMD's favor to settle down.

Two cities in Taiwan are fighting for AMD's new R&D center investment

In a new report from news outlet UDN, AMD CEO Lisa Su will visit Tainan next week, as well as visiting Nanke and Sharon to look for suitable places for its new R&D center. It's not just AMD that is eyeing off another R&D center in Taiwan, with GPU competitor NVIDIA also building a new R&D center in the country.

Both companies have applied to the Ministry of Economic Affairs' and its "Big+ Project" subsidy, with local governments rubbing their hands together with glee that NVIDIA and AMD are opening up new R&D centers in the country, especially in the southern parts of Taiwan.

Continue reading: Two cities in Taiwan are fighting for AMD's new R&D center investment (full post)