Saturday 9 May 2015

Nvidia CEO Talks About Pascal PK100 and PK104 GPUs – Will Be Produced with FinFETs and Feature HBM2

Nvidia recently held their earnings call (via KitGuru) and the CEO Jen Hsun talked a bit about the upcoming Pascal architecture. As expected however, he didn’t reveal any new detail except rehash what is already known. He did hint that further details about the product will be “coming soon” and he can’t wait to talk about them. Pascal generation of GPUs will mark an important shift in Nvidia GPUs, shifting from GDDR5 memory to HBM2 – resulting in a huge leap in bandwidth.
Nvidia PascalA slide from Nvidia’s press deck showing Pascal being roughly 10x faster than Maxwell. @Nvidia Public

Nvidia could reveal further information on Pascal GPUs sooner than expected – CEO Jen Hsun can’t wait to talk about them

Pascal GPUs are slated to be pretty damn amazing. They will feature 4X the mixed precision performance, 2X  the performance per watt, 2.7X memory capacity & 3X the bandwidth of Maxwell. Considering the fact that Nvidia’s color compression technology is already phenomenal, I am excited to see what a Pascal GPU with the same tech and massive bandwidth can offer. The PCI-E bottleneck remains as always – but that is quickly becoming irrelevant as more of the work is handled on-gpu thanks to the autonomy granted to the Graphic Processor by low level APIs such as DiretX 12.
“I cannot wait to tell you about the products that we have in the pipeline,” said Jen-Hsun Huang, chief executive officer of Nvidia, at the company’s quarterly conference call with investors and financial analysts. “There are more engineers at Nvidia building the future of GPUs than just about anywhere else in the world. We are singularly focused on visual computing, as you guys know.”

There are currently two Pascal cores that we know about – the PK104 and the PK100. The PK104 will be the GM204 successor while the PK100 will be the flagship Pascal GPU from Nvidia. Both will be manufactured on either the 14nm or 16nm node using FinFETs. Nvidia has been on the same 28nm node for around 3 years now but has managed to always deliver in terms of performance jumps per generation. Ofcourse, that will becoming exponentially difficult to maintain unless they shift to a lower process – something they plan to do with their next generation of GPUs. The use of HBM2 will let Nvidia put upto 32GB of video buffer on their GPUs and upto 1TB/s of bandwidth.
“We have found over the years to be able to focus on just one thing, which is visual computing, and be able to leverage that one thing across PC, cloud, and mobile, and be able to address four very large markets with that one thing: gaming, enterprise, cloud, and automotive,” said Mr. Huang. “We can do this one thing and now be able to enjoy all and deliver the capabilities to the market in all three major computing platforms, and gain four vertical markets that are quite frankly very exciting.” …“I cannot wait to tell you all about it, you are just going to have to wait just a little longer,” – CEO, Nvidia
We were not able to spot any new details in the Earnings Call apart from what we already know, so that was basically a little recap on Pascal GPUs. Pascal Architecture is expected to succeed Maxwell Architecture and combined with DX12 should usher in a new era of Gaming prowess. With processors consistently and comfortably ahead of the demand curve, the onslaught of high resolution standards such as 4k have increased the pressure on better GPUs. Pascal could very well be poised to offer a lineup of one of the first 4K capable single-gpu cards at the 4k@60 fps standard.

No comments:

Post a Comment