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Did you purchase a Titan ?

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Aren't the parameters for GPU Boost 2.0 build into the BIOS? Could be a messy fix for NVidia since ASUS and EVGA have their own branding in the BIOS despite the cards being physically identical.

I haven't experienced the problem yet, but of course I've only had the system up with the three Titans for less than a day.

Off topic... Funny, the spell check in IE10 is telling me Nvidia, should be spelled NVidia... okay.
 
definately starting to notice minor throttling issues. I say minor because ultimately a 20 mhz dip here in there isn't doing anything to performance but I want to know why I can repeat it by turning my mouse
 
I would guess it won't be a good value once we hit 2014 and the new cards are on the horizon. Just a random guess I would say it may hold somewhat for a while but the next gen may be faster but even if they are its unknown when they are coming.
 
Will the Titan hold its value well? I'm thinking of getting one if it's still worth a lot in a year.

It should. Even if the GTX780 comes close at a lower price it likely won't have 6GB VRAM, In which case Titan will still be the way to go for people building multi-monitor setups.
 
Will the Titan hold its value well? I'm thinking of getting one if it's still worth a lot in a year.

It's going to be quite a while before we see anything else new from AMD and Nvidia. Nvidia has also indicated they used the Titan name to differentiate it from upcoming Kepler refreshes since they intend to have Titan as the performance leader.
 
It should. Even if the GTX780 comes close at a lower price it likely won't have 6GB VRAM, In which case Titan will still be the way to go for people building multi-monitor setups.


I suspect the baseline for Maxwell will be 4 GB on the high-ish (aka non-Titan aka x80/x70) end, 2GB on the mainstream (aka x60 and below), and 8 GB on premium versions of the x80/x70.

Remember next year we'll start seeing console ports from at least one console that has a total unified memory of 8 GB GDDR5. I imagine the developers will often have that console's memory usaged divided between 2 GB for system and 6 GB for GPU's with greater high texture usage.

In which case, it behooves GPU makers to get memory sizes up there relatively swiftly for equivalent PC gaming.

All imo.
 
Will the Titan hold its value well? I'm thinking of getting one if it's still worth a lot in a year.

the gtx 690 has been chugging a long for awhile now at the $999 price point. being the titan is in the same class, i would suspect it's going to hold its value pretty well.

my 2 finally showed up! bye bye 690!
 
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