Just in time for CS6
~$1,000
http://www.geforce.com/whats-new/art...ticle-keynote/
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Just in time for CS6
~$1,000
http://www.geforce.com/whats-new/art...ticle-keynote/
Last edited by Mike Tiffee; 04-29-2012 at 08:12 AM.
Interesting. I wonder if a card like the, which uses SLI tech to integrate the two on-board processors will be fully utilized by CS6 and/or Resolve?
I know CS doesn't support dual graphic cards (SLI, etc.), but what if there were two GPUs on a single card? Does CS6 still read that as dual GPUs (i.e. dual graphics cards, single GPU on each) or is it "tricked" into thinking that the 690 is one big, powerful card?
Had he discovered this himself or read it in the press release? That's very much an "I'll believe it works at all, much less is stable, when I see it" feature.
Thanks, Curtis.
I just read that CS6 does not support the Kepler architecture yet (which is the architecture used in the GTX 680 and 690s); I'm hopeful that they'll offer an update soon that will fix this because Kepler seems to be NVidia's architecture moving forward.
Sources:
http://forums.adobe.com/message/4368056
http://forums.adobe.com/message/4389479
Since I'm in the middle of a PC build myself, I think I'll get one GTX 580 for now... with the possibility of adding a GTX 690 when Kepler is finally supported. Resolve requires two cards anyway, right (one for computations and one for display/GUI)?
Thanks!
If this card can run functionally as a single GPU and the memory is not split, it will really be worth a look.
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