Nvidia has launched the RTX 3090 Ti, its first RTX card for consumers.
Nvidia introduces the GeForce RTX 3090 Ti at a price of $1999.
The RTX 3090 Ti has 10752 CUDA cores, which is slightly higher than the 10496 on the RTX 3090.
The RT cores have gone up to 84 and the Tensor cores to 336.
Clock speed is up 20%.
This card has an increased speed compared to the previous model due to the new memory.
Nvidia claims the RTX 3090 Ti has 40 TFLOPS of single precision performance compared to 35 TFLOPS of the RTX 3090.
In gaming, it is 9 percent faster on average compared to the RTX 3090.
However, with the higher performance also comes higher power consumption. The RTX 3090 Ti has a power draw of 450W, which is 100W more than the RTX 3090.
Nvidia appears to be mainly pushing the RTX 3090 Ti as a video creator’s card, emphasising the 24GB of RAM over the 10GB or 12GB of the RTX 3080 and 3080 Ti. However, the normal RTX 3090 includes 24GB of RAM, so I’m not certain just what is unique here.
Similarly, the business is touting 8K gaming promises,
which are about as plausible now as they were two years ago when the RTX 3090 was released.
Similarly, the industry is hyping 8K gaming.
The ridiculous price of $1999 for the Founders Edition model rounds off this milquetoast announcement.
Despite the company’s own promises of a single-digit performance gain, this represents a 33 percent increase over the RTX 3090.
And, because this is the MSRP, expect to spend much more on the current market.
This will undoubtedly appeal to people who just want the fastest graphics card on the market.
After all, the last fastest card on the market was the RTX 3090, and the RTX 3090 Ti is noticeably quicker.
And there are clients for whom money is no problem or who may recoup their investment via the job they conduct on this technology.
As a result, it’s not as if there’s no market for it.
And GPU makers are well aware of this, which is why they no longer pretend that costs must be reasonable when any number can be printed on the package.