PCWorld (USA)

Titan V revealed: Nvidia’s monstrous Volta GPU finally comes to PCS

But the wait continues for PC gamers.

- BY BRAD CHACOS

Nvidia’s cutting-edge Volta GPU architectu­re has finally come to desktops. Recently, Nvidia launched the monstrous, golden Titan V, a $3,000 graphics card ( go.pcworld. com/gold) with 12GB of HBM2 memory and over a thousand more CUDA cores than the game-slaying Titan Xp ( go.pcworld.com/ttxp). But this beast isn’t made for gaming—though it’d no doubt be very good at it.

Instead, Nvidia says this card “transforms the PC into an AI supercompu­ter.” While the still-available Titan Xp ( go.pcworld.com/titn) was theoretica­lly a compute card, but better suited as a best-in-class gaming card, the Titan V doubles down on data crunching. Nvidia is giving Titan V owners free access to AI, deeplearni­ng, and high-performanc­e computing software via the Nvidia GPU cloud ( go. pcworld.com/gpuc). To boost the hardware’s machine learning capabiliti­es, the card is equipped with the same “tensor cores” found in the Volta-packing Tesla V100 ( go. pcworld.com/v100) that launched in May.

In fact, the Titan V’s core specs are very similar to the Tesla V100’s configurat­ion, but the desktop card’s HBM2 runs slightly slower—and there’s 4GB less of it. Nvidia says the Titan V delivers up to 110 teraflops of power in AI calculatio­ns, “9X that of its predecesso­r,” thanks to the introducti­on of the tensor cores.

NVIDIA TITAN V SPECS, FEATURES, AND PRICE

Transistor­s: 21.1 billion

CUDA cores: 5,120

Tensor cores: 640

GPU clock speed: 1200MHZ base, 1455MHZ boost

Memory capacity: 12GB HBM2

Memory clock: 850MHZ

Memory interface: 3,072-bit

Total memory bandwidth: 652.8Gbps Texture units: 320

Power: 250W TDP via 1x 6-pin and 1x 8-pin power connectors

Ports: 3x Displaypor­t, 1x HDMI

Price: $3,000 on Nvidia.com ( go.pcworld.com/gold)

Considerin­g how massive ( go.pcworld. com/ma55) the Tesla V100’s GPU/HBM combo wound up being, it’s very impressive indeed that Nvidia managed to cram this much power into a dual-slot desktop graphics card. To see how the new Volta

GPU architectu­re compares to the Pascal architectu­re used by current Nvidia consumer cards like the Geforce GTX 1080

Ti, head over to our explainer on what PC gamers need to know about Volta ( go. pcworld.com/v0lt).

But the most important thing gamers need to know about Volta is that we’re still waiting for it in consumer graphics cards, seven long months after the architectu­re’s original reveal. While the Titan V would likely crush modern games, this monster is squarely focused on machine learning. Don’t spend $3,000 on a highly specialize­d compute GPU just to play Witcher 3. Read Pcworld’s best graphics card guide ( go.pcworld.com/bgcg) to find the perfect fit for your budget instead, or sit tight and wait for Volta to come to the Geforce lineup. Who knows, maybe it’ll appear at CES in January. Volta has to come to consumer graphics cards sometime, right?

Right?

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