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AMD’s RDNA3 generation Radeon GPUs have arrived, and right out-of-the-gate, the company wanted to release not just one, but two models. Those include the Radeon RX 7900 XT, and the Radeon RX 7900 XTX.
NVIDIA has a very large and diverse portfolio these days when it comes to high-performance computers. We’ve already seen the announcements of the RTX 4000 series GPUs on the gaming side of things, but ...
NVIDIA had some bold claims when it announced its Ada Lovelace GeForce generation a couple of weeks ago. If you were to ignore those claims, and just stick to the paper specs, even that implied that ...
The new GeForce RTX 3070 graphics card from NVIDIA doesn’t hold many secrets, largely in part to the fact that the company revealed the specs for its first three Ampere GeForces from the get-go. That ...
Unless you’ve actively been ignoring all sources of tech news and discussion on the internet, you’re probably aware that NVIDIA released its first Ampere-powered GeForce last week. To say the launch ...
For about as long as Techgage has existed, we’ve been covering rendering performance in Maxon’s Cinema 4D. Cinebench is a well-known benchmark at this point, and because it both represents a useful ...
If you’re interested in Linux performance, you may want to take a look at our experiences with the 3990X here. In our look at AMD’s Ryzen Threadripper 3990X in Linux, we saw many occasions where the ...
It’s funny that it has been only a little over two years since Ryzen’s first-gen chips were introduced, yet it’s still felt like Zen 2 has been a long time coming. Part of that might owe itself to the ...
With this week’s release of AMD’s Radeon VII, we’ve taken a look at performance for both gaming, and professional workloads. While the card traded blows with NVIDIA’s comparable GeForce RTX 2080, ...
There are few universal constants in this world, such as the speed of light or that time marches ever onwards. Another would be that there is always an ever-increasing need for additional data storage ...
After spending quite a number of hours testing AMD’s Radeon RX Vega in both gaming and compute workloads, I wondered if there was some other interesting angle I could take a look at the card from.
When most people receive the latest top-end graphics card from AMD or NVIDIA, they get straight to testing its gaming performance. Me? Well, I’m not most people. I am hoping that there is some method ...
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