Post by account_disabled on Jan 29, 2024 6:32:27 GMT
NVIDIA quietly launched the RTX 5880 Ada Generation graphics card, designed for professional graphics applications. The product is designed to comply with the latest US export regulations for China and can be shipped to the People's Republic of China without restrictions. In the meantime, it is set to be available globally and is a much less capable flagship between the more expensive RTX 6000 Ada Generation and the RTX 5000 Ada Generation. But there is one major thing about this product. NVIDIA's RTX 5880 Ada Generation is based on the flagship AD102 graphics processor with 14,080 CUDA cores, 110 RT cores, 440 tensor cores and a 384-bit memory interface to connect 48 GB of GDDR6 memory with ECC.
The board Fax Lists comes with four DisplayPort 1.4a connectors and can support either four 4K monitors at 120Hz, four 5K displays at 60Hz, or two 8K monitors at 60Hz. In terms of power consumption and heat dissipation, it is rated at 285W (powered by a 12VHPWR connector) and comes with a standard dual fan cooling system. As the model number indicates, NVIDIA's RTX 5880 Ada Generation 48GB should be close to the RTX 6000 Ada 48GB range. Unfortunately, this is not the case, and this is a major catch with the RTX 5880 Ada. In terms of performance, NVIDIA's RTX 5880 Ada offers 69.3 FP32 TFLOPS and 554 FP8 TFLOPS, which is closer to the RTX 5800 Ada 32GB (65.3 FP32 TFLOPS and 522.1 FP8 FP8 TFLOPS instead of the ATX140P's 729 FP8 TFLOPS).
NVIDIA's RTX 6000 Ada has a remarkable FP8 Total Processing Performance (TPP) score of 5,828 (the listed processing power multiplied by the length of the operation), which is more than the 4,800 points that the US Department of Commerce wants Chinese institutions to achieve. So, the RTX 5880 Ada has a TPP score of 4432, which meets the export requirements of the US government. But this also means that the RTX 5880 Ada is significantly slower than the RTX 6000 Ada, regardless of the model number. To be honest, the RTX 5880 Ada is more like the RTX 5000 Ada on steroids than the slightly degraded RTX 6000 Ada.
The board Fax Lists comes with four DisplayPort 1.4a connectors and can support either four 4K monitors at 120Hz, four 5K displays at 60Hz, or two 8K monitors at 60Hz. In terms of power consumption and heat dissipation, it is rated at 285W (powered by a 12VHPWR connector) and comes with a standard dual fan cooling system. As the model number indicates, NVIDIA's RTX 5880 Ada Generation 48GB should be close to the RTX 6000 Ada 48GB range. Unfortunately, this is not the case, and this is a major catch with the RTX 5880 Ada. In terms of performance, NVIDIA's RTX 5880 Ada offers 69.3 FP32 TFLOPS and 554 FP8 TFLOPS, which is closer to the RTX 5800 Ada 32GB (65.3 FP32 TFLOPS and 522.1 FP8 FP8 TFLOPS instead of the ATX140P's 729 FP8 TFLOPS).
NVIDIA's RTX 6000 Ada has a remarkable FP8 Total Processing Performance (TPP) score of 5,828 (the listed processing power multiplied by the length of the operation), which is more than the 4,800 points that the US Department of Commerce wants Chinese institutions to achieve. So, the RTX 5880 Ada has a TPP score of 4432, which meets the export requirements of the US government. But this also means that the RTX 5880 Ada is significantly slower than the RTX 6000 Ada, regardless of the model number. To be honest, the RTX 5880 Ada is more like the RTX 5000 Ada on steroids than the slightly degraded RTX 6000 Ada.