Like the brand’s current range of cards, the TITAN RTX runs on NVIDIA’s Turing GPU architecture. However -and much like its predecessor – the TITAN V, this desktop GPU is designed for the realm of AI research, data science, and creative applications. To that end, the card houses a beastly 24GB of GDDR6 graphics memory, backed by 576 Tensor Cores and 72 Turing ray-tracing (RT) cores. Statistically, this allows the card to deliver up to 130 teraflops of deep learning performance, and up to 11 GigaRays of real-time ray-tracing performance per second.
As if that isn’t powerful enough, the card can also be paired with a second TITAN RTX via NVIDIA NVLink. As a single GPU, though, the card’s enormous power still allows it to render and edit 8K videos in real-time. The NVIDIA TITAN RTX is slated for availability a little later this month, both in the US and in the EU. As you’d expect, the card won’t be cheap with its official retail price of US$2499 (~RM10358). There’s no word when and if NVIDIA will be selling the card within the Asia Pacific region.