Buy Multi GPU Workstations and Servers with upto 8 X Tesla, Titan V Graphics. Tensor flow and Ubuntu preinstalled. Hello, So last July I picked up an Asrock Vega 64 for my home office/editing/gaming PC. I'm happy with it, it replaced a mid-range Nvidia 10 series and was driven to Vega 64 for the FreeSync support and a few articles noting the good workstation performance of the Vega in some rendering apps and other things here and there.
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![Multi Gpu Workstation Multi Gpu Workstation](/uploads/1/2/4/0/124067814/299781319.jpg)
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What will be better, a single gpu or multiple gpus (with around same budget, i.e. Cost of multiple gpus cost of single)?
For single display? For multiple displays?
For VR?I know it is an old question with lot of answers, but most of the articles are old. What is the current scenario, considering the fact Dx12 supports multi-gpu and newer games seem to benefit from multiple cards? Is it still worth sticking with a higher end card rather than spending the same amount of money on two cards?(I am mainly looking for 1440p@144Hz, 4k@60Hz and VR). What will be better, a single gpu or multiple gpus (with around same budget, i.e. Cost of multiple gpus cost of single)? For single display? For multiple displays?
For VR?I know it is an old question with lot of answers, but most of the articles are old. What is the current scenario, considering the fact Dx12 supports multi-gpu and newer games seem to benefit from multiple cards? Is it still worth sticking with a higher end card rather than spending the same amount of money on two cards?(I am mainly looking for 1440p@144Hz, 4k@60Hz and VR)a single powerful gpu will always be betterfor 4k there is no single card that can do the job, you are looking at two gtx 1080 ti in sil. Seconding the single GPU over multiple.
Even best case scenarios hover around 140% of the performance of the single card. It also introduces issues of its own in regards to frame timing and system overhead.But if you absolutely have to have 4k@60 fps max settings no compromises, I don't exactly disagree with maxalge but I think the Titan XP may have a shot at being a single card solution.
In fairness to max, it only hit the market 3 days ago and the NDA hasn't lifted yet so no benchmarks yet. Not to mention the $1200 price tag. Seconding the single GPU over multiple.
Even best case scenarios hover around 140% of the performance of the single card. It also introduces issues of its own in regards to frame timing and system overhead.But if you absolutely have to have 4k@60 fps max settings no compromises, I don't exactly disagree with maxalge but I think the Titan XP may have a shot at being a single card solution. In fairness to max, it only hit the market 3 days ago and the NDA hasn't lifted yet so no benchmarks yet. Not to mention the $1200 price tag.XD you are correctnvidia is releasing a new titan 'XP' which is a beefed up version of the titan X ( pascal ). Unfortunately, any sort of frame time discrepancies are magnified by VR.
If one eye gets a signal slightly out of sync with the second, well, that's when even the hardiest testers reached for the buckets. For lower resolutions, single GPU is still better for the aforementioned reasons. Also because the time between frames decreases, so any sudden spike becomes even more noticeable.As far as support, multi-GPU has been around since the mid 90's. Notably the Voodoo 2. It hasn't really improved all that much, and most developers don't dedicate much (none in some cases) resources for something that will be used by so few people. Most of their time is spent optimizing for low and mid-range setting try to get their games able to run on as many systems as possible. High end features are often extremely poorly optimized, figuring that $600+ cards can power through on brute force.
The same issues arise no matter the res, vr, monitors or any situation. This is because of how multiple gpus get used together and there's no way around it. They're 2 separate gpus.Multi gpu support will not get better.
This is proof over the ages. The same issues always get run into. Multiple doesn't outperform single gpu in 4k exactly. There's just no single gpu that powerful.yet.
You're just literally forced to use multiple top of the line gpus or get subpar performance. You're running into the limit of what current tech is capable of. The same issues arise no matter the res, vr, monitors or any situation. This is because of how multiple gpus get used together and there's no way around it. They're 2 separate gpus.Multi gpu support will not get better.
This is proof over the ages. The same issues always get run into. Multiple doesn't outperform single gpu in 4k exactly.
There's just no single gpu that powerful.yet. You're just literally forced to use multiple top of the line gpus or get subpar performance. You're running into the limit of what current tech is capable of.So, are benchmarks like this fake or misleading?
It shows two rx 480 beating gtx-1080 in some games at 4k.