yeah wait till 7nm just like the console manufacturers probably are as well. These are manufactured on the 12nm which is apparently the marketing name for TSMC's refined 14nm processes.
@@TheGoncas2 Considering they're the first in the technology and Vega is so utterly disappointing, they can price it that high. No competition so the prices will just get higher and higher every year.
My favourite part about RTX keynote was listening to the devs and watching Jensen's in-game explanations of the Turing architecture Good job Nvidia. Especially with how it's able to bring all of the games even more realistically to life via Ray tracing
I must say that nvidia has the most pleasant ceo. I really like his way presenting this cool stuff and this keynote never got boring like from other brands *apple* xD
Thanks for providing this highlight reel from the NVIDIA GeForce RTX Keynote speech. This will allow me to more easily share the news with friends and family. I've never been compelled to share details of from keynote speech before. However, this new technology is going to change everything. This is an important point in the evolution of computer graphics. I am excited to see the incredible things people will be able to do with even a modest home computer. Warm up your rending skills because the future is about to get even more creative!
They keep saying how powerful these new GPU's are but I really curious how they stack up compared to a 1080Ti, In the real world and in current titles in 4k.
SgtSnipey Judging by the amount of CUDA cores, ROPs and TMUs in the Turing 102 core (RTX 2080Ti), I expect non Ray Tracing DX11 performance to be somewhere around Titan V, maybe a bit better due to better Turing optimalization for games. And there are also RTX cores on top of that of course.
Probably something like 20% increase in current titles. Nothing spectacular. But that's not the point of the 20 series. The 20 series is purely for RTX early adopters, so that next year, when they also do the 7nm jump, they can leapfrog the fuck out of AMD with "Not only do we have better performance, but we can also do ray-tracing",which by then will be supported in many more games.
Awww Mann!!! I can't believe what sort of sneaky revolution you people over at Nvidia have started! I can see going forward in the future, if we get to a point, where all games are designed with real-time Ray Tracing in mind, we'll be entering a new Era of Graphics! We'll be essentially getting real physics based lighting simulated in our games, with actual real-life type of shadows... If this takes off, there is no limit on how photorealistic games will be 2-4 years from now, as lighting is what mostly gives away, real-life from current Computer Graphics. If i get this right, nothing will be pre-cooked and pre-rendered anymore(if Ray-Tracing takes off in gaming), but everything will be actually happening in real-time, which leaves us and game developers with endless possibilities!
This message is for Jensen Huang CEO of Nvidia Listen Jensen I ain't gonna pay 1200$ dollar for a graphics card to have some crazy shadows. If u want 1200$ dollars u need to fking blow me. The pricing is literally unbelievable and a 1200$ 2080ti can't even push 60fps at 1080p with RTX on. So,in order to get 60 or higher I need to disable RTX in game and it makes the card pointless.
Another comment based completely on rumor and speculation. Ray tracing is extremely hard to render and the fact it can do more than 1 frame per day is amazing. Not to mention drivers are not done and ROTR isnt finished.
The RTX series has kept me pumped! My laptop broke in the summer but watching all this coverage has interested me a lot. One RTX series card will be a beast. Ray-tracing seems like a very nice concept, makes things look very crisp and very clear! PUMPED!
So basically we can convert 144p video to 4k using ray trace ai deep learning kits. And magically all details gets back. Haha would like to see that happening
The upscaling is pure AI, no ray-tracing. It's also not magic, but the results are still amazing. It basically finds all lines and shapes on the screen and re-renders them at a higher resolution, and then the AI can sometimes fill in some known features. For example the network can be trained to know what high resolution hair looks like, then replace the hair it finds in video frames with the high-resolution version. The best part of neural nets however is that they can be trained. They improve over time and while the upscaling relults we have seen now are already far better than the blurryness of bilinear/trilinear or the blockyness of nearest-neighbour, the AI method will still constantly improve in the future.
I sold my 1060 to get some return back and bought a 760 to hold me off till this, 1080 is a really good choice though. I could get a 1080 for $410 right now new but I'm waiting for benchmarks as'well next month, believe me i've been looking at 1080's lol. ebay has 1080s cheap too, its a really hard choice.
@@WhiteComet_CA if u only care about having mega frames with all this tech maxed out at once resolution included then you are in the wrong year. As games get better the frame rates drop
I would love to win the new rtx2080ti.. my gtx750 just died and now I can't even play rainbow six siege and battlefield v beta soon.. I really hope I can win I really don't have 999€ to buy the rtx2080ti.
me too, what are you planning to get, this time i will buy the TI, so sick of turning some settings down or not upscaling to get better AA because the 1080 was not enough to play on 1440p.
The game demos on RTX 20 series, the most advanced and one of the largest GPU made ever is really mind-blowing. Turing with 18.9B transistors is just insane.
Man, the engineers that work with this must have a brain on the size of a super computer to understand how these things work. I have mad respect for what they can do.