GPUs
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NVIDIA RTX 4070 Ti Super and 4080 Super review: Two faster GPUs, one better deal
NVIDIA's RTX 4070 Ti Super and 4080 Super are bother faster than the original cards, but the 4080 Super's $200 discount makes it far more compelling.
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NVIDIA RTX 4070 Super review: A 1440p powerhouse for $599
The RTX 4070 Super delivers far better 1440p and 4K performance compared to the original card, making it NVIDIA’s best value for mid-range GPUs at $599.
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NVIDIA RTX 4070 review: The new 1440p gaming leader
The RTX 4070 is a solid 1440p gaming GPU that can handle ray tracing like a champ (with some 4K chops in a pinch).
Google's WebGPU is coming to Chrome to boost online gaming and graphics
Google will soon start rolling out WebGPU, a new feature that will allow Chrome to use your graphics card to accelerate games, graphics and AI.
NVIDIA RTX 3060 Ti review: The new king of $399 GPUs
NVIDIA's RTX 3060 Ti is the new king of $399 GPUs.
Radeon RX 6800 and 6800 XT review: AMD returns to high-end PC gaming
AMD's Radeon 6800 and 6800 XT prove that it can still build great high-end GPUs. They're solid NVIDIA competitors, though their ray tracing performance still needs some work.
AMD's $649 Radeon RX 6800XT will take on NVIDIA's RTX 3080
It’s the company’s first RDNA 2 video card for PCs, though that architecture will also appear in the Xbox Series X and PlayStation 5. At $649, the Radeon RX 6800XT is meant to compete with NVIDIA’s powerful $699 RTX 3080. AMD says it managed to increase the performance-per-watt of the RDNA 2 cards by 30 percent, compared to last year’s GPUs.
NVIDIA RTX 3070 review: A hot rod GPU for the practical gamer
NVIDIA's RTX 3070 is a phenomenal deal for $499. It's basically just as fast as the $999 RTX 2080 Ti.
NVIDIA's RTX A6000 and A40 are its new pro-grade GPUs
NVIDIA's new Quadro-level pro-grade GPUs are the RTX A6000 and A40.
NVIDIA RTX 3080 review: A huge leap for 4K gaming and ray tracing
NVIDIA's RTX 3080 is an absolute beast, delivering solid 4K speeds while also running ray tracing.
NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 3090 is a $1,499 GPU for 8K gaming
NVIDIA's RTX 3090 is its new Titan killer, with enough power to play games in 8K.
Watch NVIDIA's RTX 3000 GPU event here at 12PM ET
Check out NVIDIA's special GeForce event today at 12pm ET.
NVIDIA teases its next-generation RTX 3000 GPUs
NVIDIA is giving us a glimpse of its RTX 3000 Ampere GPUs.
Intel's discrete Xe GPU for gamers is coming in 2021
Intel's Xe GPU for gamers will arrive in 2021.
Radeon RX 5600 XT review: AMD's 1080p king
While AMD's RX Radeon 5700 and 5700 XT GPUs are solid options for gamers looking for great 1,440p performance, there's still a gap between those cards and the entry-level RX 5500. Enter the Radeon RX 5600 XT, AMD's middle of the road option for its new 7-nanometer RDNA architecture. It has one goal: deliver the best 1080p performance possible under $300. That might sound archaic when so many people are chasing the dream of native 4K, but AMD is positioning the 5600 XT more realistically as an ideal upgrade for gamers with older mid-range GPUs. (According to Steam's stats, its top three video cards -- the NVIDIA GTX 1050, 1050 Ti and 1060 -- are used by 35 percent of players.)
AMD's Radeon RX 5600 XT is a huge upgrade for 1080p gamers
AMD is rounding out its Radeon family at CES -- but it's not the high-end video card that many were expecting. Instead, it's debuting the Radeon RX 5600 XT, a GPU focused on delivering killer 1080p performance between 90 and 120FPS. It sits between the entry-level Radeon 5500XT, which is more focused on steady 60FPS 1080p performance, and the 5700 XT, a more powerful card for 1440p gaming.
PC gamers: Rate and review the RTX 2060 Super or 2070 Super
Affordable, fast and with excellent dual-fan cooling, NVIDIA's two new ray-tracing cards (the RTX 2060 Super and the 2070 Super) took the place of the company's excellent Ti lineup. NVIDIA's release of the GPUs was, according to senior editor Devindra Hardawar, "clearly a response to AMDs new midrange" cards. Dev managed to get impressive frame rates and gaming performance out of each, awarding the 2060 Super a score of 87 and the 2070 an 86.
NVIDIA's RTX GPUs will speed up Maya 2020 workloads
Now that NVIDIA's RTX graphics cards are boosting performance for Adobe's Creative Cloud suite and Blender, it was only a matter of time until Maya, the 3D creation tool widely used for Hollywood films and TV shows, joined the party. NVIDIA announced today that the upcoming Maya 2020 release will ship with a few new GPU-powered features. But most importantly, the app's default renderer, Arnold 6, will also take full advantage of the RTX cards' RT cores for ray tracing, as well as the Tensor Cores for AI-powered denoising. Basically, anyone running one of the new RTX notebooks, desktop cards or servers should see some helpful speed boosts when rendering with the new Autodesk software.
Final Cut Pro X gets a speed boost through Apple's Metal
The latest Final Cut Pro X update, released today, takes advantage of Apple's Metal API to provide leaps in performance. With a new Metal-based engine, the updated Final Cut Pro X improves playback and accelerates tasks like rendering, real-time effects and exporting on Metal-compatible Macs. According to Apple, the changes will make video editing 20 percent faster on the 15-inch MacBook Pro and 35 percent faster on the iMac Pro.
AMD's entry-level Radeon RX 5500 is headed to desktops... and laptops
The Radeon RX 5500 is pulling double duty for AMD: As a desktop card, it'll offer solid 1080p performance for budget gamers. But it'll also show up in laptops as the RX 5500M, a slightly less powerful GPU that'll still deliver decent performance. It was really only a matter of time until AMD gave us something slightly below the RX 5700 and 5700 XT, its latest mid-range desktop GPUS. But it's more surprising to see AMD make a stand in laptops with a standalone GPU, and not just Vega graphics tied to a Ryzen processor like it has for the past few years.