At its annual GPU Technology Conference (GTC) last night, NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang announced the GeForce TITAN Z which will sport two Kepler GK110 GPUs thereby getting the GK110 GPU into a dual-GPU desktop/workstation part. Thanks to two GK110 GPUs, the TITAN Z has 5760 CUDA cores (2880 cores per GPU) and 12GB of dedicated memory with a 7GHz memory clock. “If you’re in a desperate need of a supercomputer that you need to fit under your desk, we have just the card for you,” Jen-Hsun said. The TITAN Z has a central axial fan which pushes air out via the front and the back of the card. The shroud is reminiscent of other TITAN branded cards. There are two DVI ports, an HDMI port and a DisplayPort. NVIDIA hasn’t released clock speeds or the maximum power rating for the TITAN Z yet. The card is expected to launch next month at a price tag of $2,999 which is roughly thrice the price of their single GPU flagship - GeForce GTX TITAN Black. At that price point NVIDIA is clearly looking at segment that is more niche than one that would buy its regular TITAN card. NVIDIA aims to attract users looking primarily at compute related tasks along with gaming.
At its annual GPU Technology Conference (GTC) last night, NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang announced the GeForce TITAN Z which will sport two Kepler GK110 GPUs thereby getting the GK110 GPU into a dual-GPU desktop/workstation part. Thanks to two GK110 GPUs, the TITAN Z has 5760 CUDA cores (2880 cores per GPU) and 12GB of dedicated memory with a 7GHz memory clock. “If you’re in a desperate need of a supercomputer that you need to fit under your desk, we have just the card for you,” Jen-Hsun said.
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