I see all these obscure benchmarks yet no tests that actually matter, like crypto mining. The business that decides where half the cards end up.
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NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti Shows Very Strong Compute Performance Potential
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What a joke of an article...
No benchmark of 1080 Ti vs 2080 ? Really ? Is this article sponsored by Nvidia ?
Originally posted by varikonniemi View PostI see all these obscure benchmarks yet no tests that actually matter, like crypto mining. The business that decides where half the cards end up.
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Originally posted by YamashitaRen View PostWhat a joke of an article...
No benchmark of 1080 Ti vs 2080 ? Really ? Is this article sponsored by Nvidia ?
As stated multiple times already, I don't have an RTX 2080 (non Ti) at least not yet.... Obviously if I did, I would have been including it in the articles...Michael Larabel
https://www.michaellarabel.com/
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Originally posted by ResponseWriter View PostImpressive performance, but then this is a massive chip on 12nm being compared to smaller chips on 14/16nm. Guess we can start to get ideas about the performance a more reasonably priced Navi on 7nm will offer.
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Originally posted by varikonniemi View PostI see all these obscure benchmarks yet no tests that actually matter, like crypto mining. The business that decides where half the cards end up.
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Originally posted by schmidtbag View PostAlmost seems like this GPU should be part of the Titan series.
Also, if you compare the boost clock with the RTX Quadro 6000/8000, you can see they're holding back a bit on that, as well.
However, note that the fp benchmarks are all single-precision. Unlike the Titan V, which was build on a 100-series chip, this will not be the card to buy if you want fp64. For that, save your pennies and spring for a Titan V. I expect that will remain the go-to card for "budget" GPU Compute, for some time.
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