NVIDIA announces GeForce RTX 2080 Ti, RTX 2080 and RTX 2070

Wolverine GTR

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  • Jan 1, 2009
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    ♥♥Ŧhệatrệ Θf Drệamś♥♥
    :love:NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 will be priced at $799, GeForce RTX 2080Ti will cost $1199, full specifications revealed

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    At Gamesom on Monday, Nvidia finally announced what we have all been eagerly anticipating—a new generation of consumer graphics cards based on its "monster" Turing architecture, with ray-tracing capabilities. Specifically, Nvidia unveiled three new cards, the GeForce RTX 2070, GeForce GTX 2080, and yes, the GeForce GTX 2080 Ti.

    This is the first time that Nvidia has announced a "Ti" variant simultaneously with a new architecture. Typically the Ti models come out several months after Nvidia fleshes out its product stack. Not this time though. For this round, gamers can jump straight to the top. The cards are now live on Nvidia's website, and hoo boy, they aren't cheap.

    Pricing shakes out as follows:

    • GeForce RTX 2080 Ti: $1,199
    • GeForce RTX 2080: $799
    • GeForce RTX 2070: $599
    Nvidia is taking preorders for the GeForce RTX 2080 Ti and GeForce RTX 2080 right now, and will ship the cards "on or around" September 20, a month from today. The GeForce RTX 2070 is not available yet, and we're still waiting for Nvidia to say when it will release.

    GeForce RTX - Graphics Reinvented



    Here are the specs for each card:

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    RTX 2070

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    RTX 2080

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    RTX 2080Ti

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    Voltage

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  • Feb 6, 2012
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    GTX ඉදලා RTX වෙනස් උනෙ ඇයි ?

    Ray tracing
    Ray tracing, which has long been used for non-real-time rendering, provides realistic lighting by simulating the physical behavior of light. Ray tracing calculates the color of pixels by tracing the path that light would take if it were to travel from the eye of the viewer through the virtual 3D scene. As it traverses the scene, the light may reflect from one object to another (causing reflections), be blocked by objects (causing shadows), or pass through transparent or semi-transparent objects (causing refractions). All of these interactions are combined to produce the final color of a pixel that then displayed on the screen.
    :) https://developer.nvidia.com/rtx

     
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