NVIDIA has extended its catalog of video plates for workstations to the third day (16) with launch of the RTX A400 and RTX A1000. The applications are based on the Ampere architecture – and was successfully implemented by Ada Lovelace – which was used in its line of GPUs for games launched in 2020, but the base specifications which were implemented at a low price.
Since the new video plates are projected for desktop computers, it is therefore necessary to pay attention to the difference between the new RTX A1000 and the RTX A1000 Mobile, which is already available on professional laptops from Dell and other manufacturers thanks to NVIDIA. Thanks to the Ampere architecture, the hardware contains 2nd generation ray tracing and 3rd generation Tensor cores.
The RTX A400 is the most accessible option between launches. This is what we say about a model like no other 4 GB VRAM and 24 Tensor cores for AI processing on the GPUwhich should guarantee sufficient employment for some of the most popular artificial intelligence tasks on the market for creating images, text, video editing and more.
This model is offered for four external phones with 4K resolution. Other tasks include your dedicated video encoding and decoding engines, as well as native support for AV1 decoding.
And the RTX A1000 (for desktops) packs a GPU with 8GB of VRAM and 72 Tensor cores that the manufacturer says was very effective for its previous generation in generative AI applications, like stable streaming. The hardware also contains 18 cores dedicated to ray tracing processing.
Video operating plates with a power of 50 W, therefore, they are also more economical than a RTX 2000 Ada Lovelace, which consumes 70 W. Thanks to their design, graphics chips can operate in compact cabinets with a single fan.
Availability
NVIDIA claims that the RTX A1000 is available in the international market, such as PNY and Ryoyo Electric. The RTX A400, for example, will be available starting in May. Suggested prices are still not confirmed.
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