Maxwell, at least the GM107 chip, appears to use very little power. Since an OCed version is still ≤ 75 W I suspect a stock clock version could be considerably below 75 W.
From UK Gaming Computers: "Nvidia GTX 750 & 750 Ti Benchmarks."
OC to non-OC isn't the fairest comparison, so I'd really like to know what the stock clocks are.
Since SA/Videocardz appears to be saying the GM107 is a 28 nm midrange chip, I suspect that the 780 is likely to have a performance lead over any GM107 parts.
Even if the GM204 is 28 nm (which Videocardz doesn't think is the case), I can see it being higher performing than the 780.
Wasn't that originally from Videocardz? I'm half expecting the 780 Ti "black edition" to show up as a "880," that is, if it's even real in the first place.
Oh, I wasn't aware it was delayed so much. So would you say it's likely there will be another year of 28 nm in late 2014 through a significant chunk of 2015?
From VR-Zone: "Intel's Xeon Phi Knights series expands in 2015" contains slides that I'm assuming are from Intel and some additional information.
A lot of the information was already seen in the heise online report, but some info that's new to me is as follows:
≤ 3x single-threaded...
Perhaps Slomo4shO is using the base clock instead of the effective clock.
GTX 285: 1242 MHz (2484 Mbps).
HD 4890: 975 MHz (3900 Mbps).
HD 6950: 1250 MHz (5000 Mbps).
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