Many gamers are eagerly waiting for the RTX 40 series to be introduced by Nvidia. Nvidia announced the date of the GTC 2022 event, where it will introduce the Ada Ada Lovelace architecture that will power the RTX 40 family.
With the Arc series introduced by Intel, the competition in the graphics card market has increased. Intel, which managed to leave the RTX 3060 model behind with the Arc A770, pressed the button for the flagship models. With this move of Intel, it is possible to say that the competition in the graphics card market will rise to the next level.
Nvidia has set a date for the GTC 2022 event
With the decrease in crypto currency mining activities and the resolution of the supply problem, video card prices began to decline. According to the report published by Jon Peddie Research (JPR), the supply of graphics cards increased by 32.2 percent compared to last year. This situation is expected to be reflected in the RTX 40 series cards that Nvidia will introduce.
It is stated that the next generation architecture will have the AD102 model number. The architecture, which comes up with a smaller process node to provide higher performance, will thus have more transistors.
It is claimed that Nvidia will switch to 5nm technology in order to increase the competition against AMD, which uses 7nm technology. Along with the Ada Lovelace architecture, it is among the rumors that the new generation graphics cards will come with 18,432 CUDA cores. Considering that the RTX 3090 model has 10,496 CUDA cores, it is thought that the next generation architecture will come up with revolutionary features.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang stated that gamers will hear more about the architecture of the next generation graphics cards at GTC 2022, which will be held next month. It is estimated that the RTX 40 series will also be introduced at the event, which will start with the keynote speech on September 20.
Nvidia will use GDDR6X technology in the RTX 4090 model. The model, which is stated to have 24 GB VRAM and 384 bit data bus, will be assertive about performance.