They don't use ECC memory, just regular GDDR5. There's no ECC tables in these vbioses.
Which also helps explain the cheap prices!
They don't use ECC memory, just regular GDDR5. There's no ECC tables in these vbioses.
They don't use ECC memory, just regular GDDR5. There's no ECC tables in these vbioses.
Does that mean these are still "workstation cards"? When can we start comparing the price/performance to 7970's?
I believe that ECC RAM is optional in workstation cards, so the non-presence of it does not indicate whether this is one or not. Again, the main thing indicating Fire Pro is an software, not the hardware.
Fair enough. The W8000 and W9000 both have ECC though (W7000 does not). When making direct comparisons between the W9000 and D700, that should be taken into account. ECC is actually necessary for many professional use-cases.
Ok, I get it. So another question: what exactly do the flops number of these cards mean?
One (me) would think based on the published numbers (2 vs. 2.2) that the performance difference between the D300 and D500 would not be very great.
They don't use ECC memory, just regular GDDR5. There's no ECC tables in these vbioses.
But mostly in e.g. scientific computing applications, not the sort of apps creative pros run.
The Mac has traditionally been somewhat popular in some segments in the sciences, but this has been a comparatively small market for Apple,
and a lot of the computational heavy lifting in that world has moved to clusters and/or cloud services now.
None of the AMD powered cards use ECC memory. The ECC support is layered on top of regularly VRAM by the GPUs memory controller. They all use regular GDDR5. They would need more VRAM to store the additional checksum data.