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Excellent news, can't wait until all GPU's have HVM, smaller more efficient cards ftw!![]()
So should I upgrade from a GTX 960 to a 1060, 1070 or Fury X ?
While nvidia can stick to ddr5 and keep reducing bandwidth requirements at the same time as increasing performance.
You'll be waiting for a while, HVM isn't due to be released until 2020.
I was mistaken on how HBM worked, my apologies.
The obvious big advantage of hbm is less board space, but on the flip side just like sapphire and others done, you can have the same size board and have a very effective heatsink due to the overlap. This could even be reflected in reference boards instead of just third party boards.
Actually there's another huge advantage to HBM. It uses far less power and generates far less heat. Both of these are as much the limiting factors on GPU performance as the cost of the silicon. GDDR5 eats a lot of power (and necessarily spits it back out as heat). HBM gives a substantial increase in headroom to crank the GPU itself up further.
Heat is negated by the fact that the heat is more concentrated on the core with the vram and the core producing a more intense hot spot as opposed to the ram being spread out. Not really sure how much difference in terms of power it makes.
Heat is negated by the fact that the heat is more concentrated on the core with the vram and the core producing a more intense hot spot as opposed to the ram being spread out. Not really sure how much difference in terms of power it makes.
The acid lining to all this is that it implies that HBM2 is too expensive to use in standard consumer GPU's.
That would be a huge shame.
The real point is no one is using HBM1 0r HBM2 on a gaming card, not even a Pascal Titan X.
Maybe this is to do with price or maybe it is to do with performance. Whichever way you want to look at it both AMD and NVidia have decided to use other solutions for their gaming cards.
I understood that AMD are using HBM2 for Vega. That's what it says on their slides. Have they announced otherwise?
While it is always nice to hear about new tech, lets see how well the second generation of HBM graphics cards early next year do first.
Also thinking about it AMD supposedly going to be using next gen memory on Navi rather than HBM, so where does that leave HBM*.