NVIDIA resurrects Pascal architecture on its modest new GeForce GT 1010
Source: Geeknetic added 18th Jan 2021
by Antonio Delgado Make 30 minutes …
With increasingly powerful integrated graphics, the existence of ultra-low-end graphics cards is increasingly testimonial and oriented to computers that do not have an iGPU and need to output a video signal in some way. NVIDIA has quietly released their “new” NVIDIA GeForce GT 1010, a model designed to close the performance tables of your current chart catalog and which, except for surprise, is based on the old Pascal architecture.
The card has not been officially announced, and being such a modest product was not something to expect, but it can already be seen on the NVIDIA driver download website, where it appears within GeForce series 10.
At the moment it is not available to The sale, nor are there any pre-assembled equipment with this card, being the OEM market one of the possible destinations of this new model.
The NVIDIA GeForce GT 1030 offers only 256 CUDA Cores with 2 GB of GDDR5.
This model would only have 468 CUDA Cores to 1. 228 MHz speed with a Boost of 1. 468 MHz together with 2 GB of GDDR5 memory with a bus of 64 – bits. Below the GT 1030 which “led” the ranking of Pascal GPUs by the tail. Its TDP is 64 W and is based on GPU GP 108.
Previous GT 1030
At a time when it is practically impossible to get hold of one of its graphics cards, perhaps the only solution for all those who are riding right now a computer by parts means getting an ultra-low-end model like this to have something functional while the stock is not rebuilt, something that, according to NVIDIA itself, will not happen at least until last April. It is paradoxical that at a time when the latest graphics architectures from NVIDIA and AMD have taken a considerable leap in performance, users cannot enjoy it and have to settle for graphics from previous generations.
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Antonio Delgado
Computer Engineer by training, editor and hardware analyst at Geeknetic since 2011. I love gutting everything that comes my way, especially the latest hardware that we get here for reviews. In my spare time I fiddle with 3d printers, drones and other gadgets. For anything here you have me.