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NVIDIA Launches New Midrange Maxwell-Based GeForce GTX 960 Graphics Card

MojoKid writes NVIDIA is launching a new Maxwell desktop graphics card today, targeted at the sweet spot of the graphics card market ($200 or so), currently occupied by its previous gen GeForce GTX 760 and older GTX 660. The new GeForce GTX 960 features a brand new Maxwell-based GPU dubbed the GM206. NVIDIA was able to optimize the GM206's power efficiency without moving to a new process, by tweaking virtually every part of the GPU. NVIDIA's reference specifications for the GeForce GTX 960 call for a base clock of 1126MHz and a Boost clock of 1178MHz. The GPU is packing 1024 CUDA cores, 64 texture units, and 32 ROPs, which is half of what's inside their top-end GeForce GTX 980. The 2GB of GDDR5 memory on GeForce GTX 960 cards is clocked at a speedy 7GHz (effective GDDR5 data rate) over a 128-bit memory interface. The new GeForce GTX 960 is a low-power upgrade for gamers with GeForce GTX 660 class cards or older that make up a good percentage of the market now. It's usually faster than the previous generation GeForce GTX 760 card but, depending on the game title, can trail it as well, due to its narrower memory interface.

3 of 114 comments (clear)

  1. Re:What is a cuda core? by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 1, Informative

    is that one processor or a collection ?

    Each "CUDA core" is a single processor, which can run a CUDA instance, or an OpenCL instance, or run a shading algorithm. The card has 1024 of them.

  2. Re:Awesome, I shall buy one in a year by mc6809e · · Score: 4, Informative

    Personally I love the GTX 750. It gives the biggest bang-for-the-buck and running at about 55 watts max or so it usually doesn't require a larger power supply. It can run completely off motherboard power going to a 16-lane 75 watt PCIe slot.

    It's the perfect card for rescuing old systems from obsolescence, IMO.

    The only trouble you might have is finding a single-slot-wide card if your system doesn't have room for a double slot card, though in my case I found a double-slot card that I could modify to fit in a single-slot of an old Core 2 Duo E8500 system.

    And heat doesn't seem to be a problem at all, even with the mod I did. The low power of the card means less heat. Even if heat becomes a problem, the card is capable of slowly clocking itself down, though I've never seen that yet, even running Furmark.

  3. Re:Midrange? by rcht148 · · Score: 3, Informative

    I never said that I'm using 4k.
    After your response I think my original comment might make me look like a resolution whore.
    My point was NOT that the card should be labeled low end because of 4k. Rather, it should be labeled high end.
    I play at 1920x1080 resolution. So from my perspective, the card is high end.
    It's just that cards get labeled based on series (like Nvidia x60 series is mid-end) which is primarily based on price.
    When there are graphics cards available from $30-3000, the low, mid and high end will be different based on a person's usage and perspective.

    My point was that for vast majority of people (according to Steam Hardware survey: > 98%) who would be gaming at 1920x1080 or less, this card would be high end.
    (Note to self: Well done on conveying exactly opposite of what you are trying to say without using sarcasm, negation or typos)