Nvidia’s initial Blackwell GPUs are rumored to have ‘extremely limited’ stock It’s claimed that the RTX 5090 will be particularly thin on the ground This is the case for the German market, but it could well reflect the wider picture We’ve heard our first rumblings that Nvidia’s initial next-gen GPUs,
As the RTX 50-series is right around the corner, it's almost time to bid farewell to some of Nvidia's most popular GPUs.
NVIDIA's next-gen Rubin AI GPU architecture expected to enter 'trial production' in 2H 2025, SK hynix is moving faster than ever to get HBM4 ready.
Not convinced RTX 5000 is a winner? Folks worried about a reliance on ‘fake frames’ may not be that impressed with these fresh benchmarks.
NVIDIA's RTX 5090 has been spotted in apparent Geekbench Vulkan and OpenCL runs, but the next-gen flagship doesn't impress all that much here.
Want a Blackwell GPU to pep up cheaper gaming laptops? Here’s some good news – Nvidia’s RTX 5050 has been spotted (but not in a gaming notebook).
Nvidia hasn't announced the RTX 5060 yet, but I'm already worried about how the card will perform when it shows up.
On price alone, AMD has a leg up on Nvidia. AMD offers more affordable graphics card options, focusing on the budget and midrange options. AMD's flagship GPUs, the AMD Radeon RX 70 series, start as low as $269.99, with the upper range peaking at $999.
Nvidia GeForce and AMD Radeon graphics card sales are rising, as is the demand for AMD Ryzen CPUs with integrated GPUs for handhelds.
Zotac's RTX 5090 Extreme Infinity graphics card is the first to be spotted sporting an official 600W TGP rating, up from the default 575W.
As anticipated, Nvidia Monday kicked off its CES 2025 keynote by unveiling the new RTX Blackwell family of GPUs. The centerpiece of the line is the RTX
In a packed Las Vegas arena, Nvidia founder Jensen Huang stood on stage and marveled over the crisp real-time computer graphics displayed on the screen behind him. He watched as a dark-haired woman walked through ornate gilded double doors and took in the rays of light that poured in through stained glass windows.