Amidst the rapidly growing AI market, NVIDIA's server revenue has far surpassed that of personal consumer consumption. The company may not heavily focus on NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 “Blackwell” products for consumers, instead concentrating more on areas likely to generate greater profits and revenue.
Previously, it was believed that the highest-end version of RTX 50 'Blackwell' would feature a 512-bit memory interface, providing bandwidth of up to 1792 GB/s. However, according to the latest information, it seems NVIDIA has decided to maintain the same memory interface as on RTX 40 'Ada Lovelace'.
The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 40 'Ada' GPU lineup currently includes five SKUs:- AD102 (384-bit)
- AD103 (256-bit)
- AD104 (192-bit)
- AD106 (128-bit)
- AD107 (128-bit)
Previous rumors also suggest NVIDIA will use
16Gb (2GB) memory with a speed of 32Gbps. Thus, the GB200 'Blackwell' GPU product line will have the following configurations:- GB202 - 384-bit / 32 Gbps / 24 GB (Max Memory) / 1536 GB/s (Max Bandwidth)
- GB203 - 256-bit / 32 Gbps / 16 GB (Max Memory) / 1024 GB/s (Max Bandwidth)
- GB205 - 192-bit / 32 Gbps / 12 GB (Max Memory) / 768 GB/s (Max Bandwidth)
- GB206 - 128-bit / 32 Gbps / 8 GB (Max Memory) / 512 GB/s (Max Bandwidth)
- GB207 - 128-bit / 32 Gbps / 8 GB (Max Memory) / 512 GB/s (Max Bandwidth)
Moreover, the GPU lineup
NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 'Blackwell' will be manufactured on the TSMC 3nm process node and will support DisplayPort 2.1. These products are expected to be introduced in late 2024, nearly a year after the release of the RTX 40 'SUPER' series and two years after the release of the RTX 40 'Ada' series.Read more: NVIDIA profits surge... 769%, all thanks to AIIf you're interested in powerful graphics cards at affordable prices, then check out the product list below:
