China has been inventive in its attempts at smuggling technology into the country over the last few years. We analyzed the numerous attempts and found that nearly four million dollars in technology have been tried to travel across borders. Most cases have been memory, processors, and graphics cards. However, the attempts climbed in cost rapidly since the country has been cut off from several companies due to US government officials' directives. In a recent smuggling attempt, a cargo of live lobsters numbered 200 and weighing 280 kg (617 lbs) was hiding 70 NVIDIA Quadro K2200 GPUs, according to The Register.
The lobsters were being transported by land vehicle, a van to be specific, attempting to cross the Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macao Bridge. This bridge combines 55 kilometers "of roads, bridges, and tunnels around the Pearl River Delta." The vehicle had no paperwork available, but the total value estimated by Hong Kong Customs is $76,500. The value is estimated to be combined between NVIDIA Quadro K2200 GPUs and crooked crustaceans.
NVIDIA's Quadro K2200 graphics cards were initially released in 2014. The GPUs are based on the Maxwell architecture, offering 4 GB of GDDR5 memory with a memory interface of 128 bits. The memory bandwidth is 80 GB/s and offers 640 CUDA cores. The NVIDIA Quadro K2200 graphics card uses the PCIe 2.0 x 16 interface with a max power consumption of 68 W.
Thermals are controlled with an ultra-quiet active fansink. Display connectors on the NVIDIA Quadro K2200 are a single DVI-I DL and two DisplayPort 1.2 ports and can connect up to three displays directly or four through the multi-stream functionality of the DP 1.2 ports. Max resolution is 3840 x 2160 through DP 1.2, 2560 x 1600 through DVI-I DL, and 1920 x
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