The next Gen RTX is here – The RTX 40 Series

Nvidia had just recently announced the GeForce RTX 4000 series of graphics card, as its latest annual GPU release. With the new GeForce RTX 4090 and GeForce RTX 4080, your system will have the power to render fully simulated, fully ray-traced worlds at the highest resolutions, with incredible levels of detail and unbelievable performance. Its […]

Nvidia had just recently announced the GeForce RTX 4000 series of graphics card, as its latest annual GPU release.

With the new GeForce RTX 4090 and GeForce RTX 4080, your system will have the power to render fully simulated, fully ray-traced worlds at the highest resolutions, with incredible levels of detail and unbelievable performance. Its upcoming GeForce RTX 4000 graphics cards will offer a two- to four-times performance increase over its last-generation GPUs.

NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang finally announced the Ada Lovelace microarchitecture that will power the 3rd generation of RTX GPUs.The Ada Lovelace microarchitecture is based on TSMC’s 4nm N4 technology.

This packs a whopping 76 billion transistors, which is a huge upgrade on the 28 billion transistors found on the preceding Ampere architecture.

A higher number of transistors generally results in a faster performance, so it’s clear to see that the RTX 4000 Series will provide a significant performance boost.

NVIDIA is trying to make it big in the AI computing space, and it shows in its latest-generation chip. The Ada Lovelace microarchitecture uses 4th-generation Tensor Cores, capable of delivering 1,400 Tensor TFLOPs—over four times faster than the 3090 Ti, which only had 320 Tensor TFLOPs.

This new generation of Tensor Cores is probably why DLSS 3.0 performs much better than its previous iterations. It could also be why comparatively lower-model 4000-series chips outperform the top-tier models of the 3000-series GPUs.

GeForce RTX 4090 graphics cards launch October 12th, followed by GeForce RTX 4080 graphics cards in November.

There’s no exact release date just yet, but we’ll update this article as soon as we hear more.

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