Somebody sent our GPU-Z validation database a curious looking entry. Labeled "NVIDIA Quadro M6000" (not to be confused with AMD FirePro M6000), with a device ID of 10DE - 17F0, this card is running on existing Forceware 347.09 drivers, and features a BIOS string that's unlike anything we've seen. Could this be the fabled GM200/GM210 silicon?
The specs certainly look plausible - 3,072 CUDA cores, 50 percent more than those on the GM204; a staggering 96 ROPs, and a 384-bit wide GDDR5 memory interface, holding 12 GB of memory. The memory is clocked at 6.60 GHz (GDDR5-effective), belting out 317 GB/s of bandwidth. The usable bandwidth is higher than that, due to NVIDIA's new lossless texture compression algorithms. The core is running at gigahertz-scraping 988 MHz. The process node and die-size are values we manually program GPU-Z to show, since they're not things the drivers report (to GPU-Z). NVIDIA is planning to hold a presser on the 8th of January, along the sidelines of the 2015 International CES. We're expecting a big announcement (pun intended).
http://www.techpowerup.com/208501/possible-nvidia-gm200-specs-surface.html
Can anyone spot why this is a fake.

When the original Titan came out it ran PCI-E 2.0 unless you used the hack.
If you notice in the link the spec table also has this err new card running PCI-E 2.0
I think all this faker has done is get hold of the original Titan specs and scale things up a bit forgetting about the PCI-E 2.0 lol.
Or I could be wrong.
If you notice in the link the spec table also has this err new card running PCI-E 2.0
I think all this faker has done is get hold of the original Titan specs and scale things up a bit forgetting about the PCI-E 2.0 lol.
Or I could be wrong.
