mersenneforum.org  

Go Back   mersenneforum.org > Great Internet Mersenne Prime Search > Hardware > GPU Computing

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 2010-03-29, 23:03   #1
nucleon
 
nucleon's Avatar
 
Mar 2003
Melbourne

5·103 Posts
Default GF100 reviews are out

Here's one at Anand:

http://www.anandtech.com/video/showdoc.aspx?i=3783&p=1

Anyone able to get the cuda prime floating around to run on it yet.

I'm curious to see how fast it is. Vs GTX285, it's 3.6x faster in folding@home, 8x faster in other CUDA benchmarks.

-- Craig
nucleon is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2010-03-30, 06:16   #2
msft
 
msft's Avatar
 
Jul 2009
Tokyo

2·5·61 Posts
Default

http://forums.nvidia.com/lofiversion...p?t164417.html
Quote:
In the GeForce family, double-precision throughput has been reduced to 25% of the full design.
I can save my $500.
msft is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2010-03-30, 08:38   #3
ATH
Einyen
 
ATH's Avatar
 
Dec 2003
Denmark

22·863 Posts
Default

Another review:

http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/...-480,2585.html


About GPGPU:
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/...0,2585-20.html

"But with GF100, Nvidia completely reworked the architecture, and the dedicated MAD unit has been done away with. Now, the same units handle single- and double-precision calculation, and performance is reduced only by half with double-precision."

Last fiddled with by ATH on 2010-03-30 at 08:38
ATH is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2010-04-02, 09:11   #4
nucleon
 
nucleon's Avatar
 
Mar 2003
Melbourne

5×103 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by msft View Post
MSFT - that's a reduction of the _planned_ performance. It's still waaay faster than previous generations.

I'd be curious if anyone is going to give it a burl. I'm thinking of getting one - but they aren't out here for another couple of weeks yet (at least).

-- Craig
nucleon is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2010-04-02, 17:00   #5
joblack
 
joblack's Avatar
 
Oct 2008
n00bville

25·23 Posts
Default

It seems that the graphic card gpu between home and professional card is the same.

If that's the case it could be easy to get the handbrake out of the 'cheaper version' by patching the graphic card firmware (removing delays or noops) ... :).
joblack is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2010-04-02, 20:09   #6
ldesnogu
 
ldesnogu's Avatar
 
Jan 2008
France

3×199 Posts
Default

That'd be extremely stupid from nVidia not to use fuses to disable hardware to allow segmentation.
ldesnogu is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2010-04-02, 20:59   #7
joblack
 
joblack's Avatar
 
Oct 2008
n00bville

25×23 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by ldesnogu View Post
That'd be extremely stupid from nVidia not to use fuses to disable hardware to allow segmentation.
They would have to designed a different chip to slow down double precision. The easier thing would be to just slow it down with a software solution.

Last fiddled with by joblack on 2010-04-02 at 21:00
joblack is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2010-04-02, 22:25   #8
ldesnogu
 
ldesnogu's Avatar
 
Jan 2008
France

3×199 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by joblack View Post
They would have to designed a different chip to slow down double precision. The easier thing would be to just slow it down with a software solution.
Not at all, they could just physically prevent some units from being used, just like some cores can be disabled.

I'm not saying they're doing so, that would just make sense.
ldesnogu is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2010-04-03, 02:24   #9
nucleon
 
nucleon's Avatar
 
Mar 2003
Melbourne

5·103 Posts
Default

The professional version might have ECC memory. The chip supposedly supports it, but I haven't seen any consumer cards with ECC.

-- Craig
nucleon is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2010-04-03, 03:48   #10
S485122
 
S485122's Avatar
 
"Jacob"
Sep 2006
Brussels, Belgium

2·977 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by ldesnogu View Post
Not at all, they could just physically prevent some units from being used, just like some cores can be disabled.

I'm not saying they're doing so, that would just make sense.
That would make commercial sense. Fabricating something and impairing part of it while doing that does not make sense. Economy does not make sense. It is a general problem with tools becoming goals. Economy has been a tool for a society, now society is a tool for economy.

Sorry about the of topic ranting.

Jacob
S485122 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2010-04-03, 07:42   #11
cheesehead
 
cheesehead's Avatar
 
"Richard B. Woods"
Aug 2002
Wisconsin USA

11110000011002 Posts
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by S485122 View Post
That would make commercial sense. Fabricating something and impairing part of it while doing that does not make sense.
Rant status noted, here's a counterargument:

Suppose (it's an economic argument -- sorry):

Company A offers a 3 MHz widget for $89 and a 4 MHz widget for $99.

Company A's 3 MHz widgets have a manufacturing cost of $87. Their 4 MHz widgets have a manufacturing cost of $86. (This is explained later.)

The competitors' average market prices are $92 for 3 MHz widgets, $99 for 4MHz widgets.

The competitors' average manufacturing costs are $83 for 3 Mhz widgets and $93 for 4Mhz widgets.

Company A has found a way to use certain rejects on its 4 MHz assembly line which work perfectly at 3 MHz but not at 4 MHz, and manufacture all these 4 MHz widgets, whether passing the 4 MHz test or passing only the 3 MHz test, for $86. That's above their competitors' cost for 3 MHz widgets but below their competitors' cost for 4 MHz widgets. They use the net cost savings on their widgets to sell 3 MHz widgets for less than their competitors, while matching their prices on 4 MHz widgets.

Their manufacturing cost savings on (all-speed) widgets arises solely from their innovative method of being able to market all manufactured widgets from their 4 MHz assembly line, instead of discarding all those that could pass the 3 MHz test, but not the 4 MHz test. They make a simple change to the less-than-4-MHz-capable widgets that restricts their speed to 3 MHz and costs just $1.

A while after their introduction of their 3 MHz widgets at $89, consumer demand exceeds the number that come from less-than-4-MHz-capable rejects, so they divert a small additional proportion of 4-MHz-capable widgets to the line that installs the $1-cost 3-MHz speed limitation.

Isn't this a win-win for both consumers and company A, made possible by company A's innovative use of less-than-4-MHz-capable widgets from their 4 MHz manufacturing line? Either way, the consumer who pays for a 3-MHz-capable widget gets a 3-MHz-capable widget, and the consumer who pays for a 4-MHz-capable widget gets a 4-MHz-capable widget.

- -

Now suppose the situation is that company B can manufacture double-precision-capable chips, and it's cheaper to disable DP on a portion of them than it would be to have their chips manufactured on two separate lines (one for DP, one for non-DP), because they get greater economy-of-scale from the combined line (with a low-cost extra step to disable DP on a portion of them) than on two separate lines. Part of the savings comes from their flexibility in meeting separate demands for DP and non-DP chips without having to have a separate manufacturing line for non-DP chips.

The consumer who pays for a non-DP-capable chip gets a non-DP-capable chip. The consumer who pays for a DP-capable chip gets a DP-capable chip.
cheesehead is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply



Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
What's a good website for reviews of digitally-based content? jasong jasong 0 2015-06-23 22:55

All times are UTC. The time now is 15:11.


Fri Jul 7 15:11:30 UTC 2023 up 323 days, 12:40, 0 users, load averages: 0.80, 1.02, 1.09

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2023, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

This forum has received and complied with 0 (zero) government requests for information.

Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation.
A copy of the license is included in the FAQ.

≠ ± ∓ ÷ × · − √ ‰ ⊗ ⊕ ⊖ ⊘ ⊙ ≤ ≥ ≦ ≧ ≨ ≩ ≺ ≻ ≼ ≽ ⊏ ⊐ ⊑ ⊒ ² ³ °
∠ ∟ ° ≅ ~ ‖ ⟂ ⫛
≡ ≜ ≈ ∝ ∞ ≪ ≫ ⌊⌋ ⌈⌉ ∘ ∏ ∐ ∑ ∧ ∨ ∩ ∪ ⨀ ⊕ ⊗ 𝖕 𝖖 𝖗 ⊲ ⊳
∅ ∖ ∁ ↦ ↣ ∩ ∪ ⊆ ⊂ ⊄ ⊊ ⊇ ⊃ ⊅ ⊋ ⊖ ∈ ∉ ∋ ∌ ℕ ℤ ℚ ℝ ℂ ℵ ℶ ℷ ℸ 𝓟
¬ ∨ ∧ ⊕ → ← ⇒ ⇐ ⇔ ∀ ∃ ∄ ∴ ∵ ⊤ ⊥ ⊢ ⊨ ⫤ ⊣ … ⋯ ⋮ ⋰ ⋱
∫ ∬ ∭ ∮ ∯ ∰ ∇ ∆ δ ∂ ℱ ℒ ℓ
𝛢𝛼 𝛣𝛽 𝛤𝛾 𝛥𝛿 𝛦𝜀𝜖 𝛧𝜁 𝛨𝜂 𝛩𝜃𝜗 𝛪𝜄 𝛫𝜅 𝛬𝜆 𝛭𝜇 𝛮𝜈 𝛯𝜉 𝛰𝜊 𝛱𝜋 𝛲𝜌 𝛴𝜎𝜍 𝛵𝜏 𝛶𝜐 𝛷𝜙𝜑 𝛸𝜒 𝛹𝜓 𝛺𝜔