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Graphics Hardware

NVIDIA Quadro M6000 12GB Maxwell Workstation Graphics Tested Showing Solid Gains 66

MojoKid writes: NVIDIA's Maxwell GPU architecture has has been well-received in the gaming world, thanks to cards like the GeForce GTX Titan X and the GeForce GTX 980. NVIDIA recently took time to bring that same Maxwell goodness over the workstation market as well and the result is the new Quadro M6000, NVIDIA's new highest-end workstation platform. Like the Titan X, the M6000 is based on the full-fat version of the Maxwell GPU, the G200. Also, like the GeForce GTX Titan X, the Quadro M6000 has 12GB of GDDR5, 3072 GPU cores, 192 texture units (TMUs), and 96 render outputs (ROPs). NVIDIA has said that the M6000 will beat out their previous gen Quadro K6000 in a significant way in pro workstation applications as well as GPGPU or rendering and encoding applications that can be GPU-accelerated. One thing that's changed with the launch of the M6000 is that AMD no longer trades shots with NVIDIA for the top pro graphics performance spot. Last time around, there were some benchmarks that still favored team red. Now, the NVIDIA Quadro M6000 puts up pretty much a clean sweep.
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NVIDIA Quadro M6000 12GB Maxwell Workstation Graphics Tested Showing Solid Gains

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  • No use (Score:3, Funny)

    by maestroX ( 1061960 ) on Friday April 24, 2015 @02:33AM (#49543609)
    Doesn't even have a D-sub connector!
    • by Anonymous Coward

      How did you manage a score of two? Is my sarcasm detector on the blink?

      It has a DVI-I output, so a DVI-I to D-Sub adapter could be used.

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by maestroX ( 1061960 )

        How did you manage a score of two?

        I created an account over 10-15 years ago, treated it with utmost care and love, only now and then jesting, but very cautiously and carefully.
        With the occasional post, my precious karma went silently up and up, and up and up.
        Until today, I felt the longing for OMG frist post, succumbed and finally blew it all on an Nvidia topic.

        Perhaps on topic, what useful task would this card capabilities be insufficient for? (useful in the sense with video output)

        • by drkim ( 1559875 )

          what useful task would this card capabilities be insufficient for? (useful in the sense with video output)

          Video editing, image processing, or VFX.

          Avid and Premier, Photoshop, and After Effects can use the CUDA processing power of this card.

  • Too bad (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday April 24, 2015 @03:16AM (#49543723)

    its too bad there is no double precision performance to speak of on these newer cards lately. good for games, not much else.

    • nVidia doesn't care about double precision. The benchmark suites don't, either.

      But researchers do, and that (and price/performance) makes them go AMD.

    • by HetMes ( 1074585 )
      If your algorithm is unstable at single precision floating point, it's going to be unstable at double precision as well.

      I think there's only very small niche of applications for GPGPU cards where double precision is absolutely necessary.
      • Re:Too bad (Score:4, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday April 24, 2015 @04:33AM (#49543861)

        If your algorithm is unstable at single precision floating point, it's going to be unstable at double precision as well.

        Do you even know what you're talking about? error propagation, does that ring a bell? I'll give you a hint, if your computation requires a large number of operations then the absolute magnitude of machine rounding errors is critical. And, lest you think this is a 'very small niche', any matrix multiplication has O(n) operation per element. Chain a few those (say, in a Markov chain type of random walk) and it's an exponential growth. Using double instead of single is like being able to do periodic (expensive) full recomputations to control stability of a fast-updating chain instead of barely having enough precision when doing the full recomputations. Fast and stable versus extremely slow and perhaps (depending on today's $DEITY's mood) barely stable.

        To put it differently, by the time error accumulation in double precision leaves you with a single-precision-worth of valid digits, single precision error accumulation has long ago made the computed value completely meaningless.

  • by wiredog ( 43288 ) on Friday April 24, 2015 @05:14AM (#49543961) Journal

    "Sponsored Content" banner at the top of this post?

    • "Sponsored Content" banner at the top of this post?

      Right next to the "Guaranteed to Run Crysis" stamp!

  • The triangles shouldn't care if they are being rendered for a game or cad.
    With Nvidia, you have a choice of a workstation card that cannot cool itself, or a a gaming card that has been intentionally crippled for CAD.

  • by rthille ( 8526 )

    Less space (12GB vs 16GB) than AMD
    No DisplayPort 1.3
    No Wireless
    Lame.

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