NVIDIA's next-gen GeForce RTX 50 "Blackwell" Gaming GPU flagship is expected to feature GDDR7 memory support, claims Kopite7kimi.
The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 series is expected to utilize the Blackwell Gaming GPU architecture though a bit different from the one coming to HPC and AI customers next year. Currently, there have been roadmaps that point out to a 2025 launch but some rumors suggest that late 2024 is when we might get to see the latest graphics lineup.
This can be seen as confirmation.
— kopite7kimi (@kopite7kimi) November 15, 2023
However, today's topic discusses the memory configuration which according to Kopite7kimi is going to make sure of the latest GDDR7 memory standard. The GDDR7 memory will evolve the GDDR6 & GDDR6X standard with even faster pin speeds and denser capacities. The initial dies utilize up to 24 Gb modules and and up to 32 Gbps speeds. These are the ones that will debut in 2024. There will be an even faster revision which is planned for 2026 but it is unlikely that NVIDIA would wait that long to use the latest memory technologies. Rather, that would be used by a new or a refreshed family.
Following is the bandwidth the 32 Gbps pin speeds would offer across multiple bus configurations:
Although the exact memory configurations aren't mentioned for the NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 Flagship GPU, what is mentioned is that the card will feature a 384-bit bus interface so it seems like 512-bit may no longer be on the planning board or it is just meant for an even higher-end variant. The 384-bit memory bus suggests that we will either get the same 24 GB VRAM or 36 GB depending on the DRAM densities used. At the 32 Gbps speeds, the 384-bit bus interface would offer up to 1.5 TB/s of bandwidth which marks an
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