It appears you have not yet registered with our community. To register please click here...

 
Go Back [M] > Madshrimps > WebNews
ASUS Launches An Old GPU: The NVIDIA GT 710 with Four 4K HDMI Ports ASUS Launches An Old GPU: The NVIDIA GT 710 with Four 4K HDMI Ports
FAQ Members List Calendar Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read


ASUS Launches An Old GPU: The NVIDIA GT 710 with Four 4K HDMI Ports
Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 14th April 2020, 10:19   #1
[M] Reviewer
 
Stefan Mileschin's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2010
Location: Romania
Posts: 153,575
Stefan Mileschin Freshly Registered
Default ASUS Launches An Old GPU: The NVIDIA GT 710 with Four 4K HDMI Ports

I've noticed of late that certain companies are 'relaunching' older parts in new designs. We've seen it recently with some of the older AMD APUs finding their way into new motherboard designs, but here it's a case of a base GPU returning to the market. ASUS has listed on its website a 'new' GT 710: this is a super low end graphics chip with 192 CUDA cores on the 87 mm2 GK208 Kepler die that originally launched in late 2015 / early 2016. The goal of this sort of graphics card us to supply basic video outputs to machines that do not come with any integrated graphics on the processor.

What's different about this card, which comes with 2 GB of GDDR5 memory, is that it has four HDMI video outputs. On a modern graphics card you might expect a DisplayPort or two, but here it's all just HDMI. Despite the GK208 GPU not supporting HDMI 2.0 natively, this is the sort of card that is going to take advantage of NVIDIA opening up 4K60 with 4:2:0 subchroma sampling support on Kepler, which makes it useful for video at the most (you won't want to be running a full desktop experience with it).

ASUS states that the card can support 4K60 in this mode when one monitor is attached, or 4K30 when multiple displays are attached. Obviously with this horsepower we're not going to be doing any gaming - it's simply at the cheap end of the spectrum for office machines or library machines or similar. ASUS suggests using multiple cards at once for anyone that needs 12-16+ displays.

This card uses a PCIe 2.0 x1 connection, ensuring compatibility for a wide range of older machines, and offers a 954 MHz engine clock and a 5000 MHz memory clock. The GT710-4H-SL-2GD5 is expected to be in the ~$50 range when it comes to market.

https://www.anandtech.com/show/15713...our-hdmi-ports
Stefan Mileschin is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
FreeSync-over-HDMI: Samsung Launches 1800R Curved FHD Monitors Stefan Mileschin WebNews 0 2nd March 2016 07:30
ASUS Launches The Chromebit CS10 HDMI Stick Stefan Mileschin WebNews 0 18th November 2015 08:56
Put a pair of Type-C ports up front with Asus' USB 3.1 UPD Panel Stefan Mileschin WebNews 0 24th August 2015 10:01
StarTech.com Launches its USB 3.0 to HDMI and USB 3.0 to VGA Display Adapters Stefan Mileschin WebNews 0 9th December 2011 08:00
NVIDIA ports its CUDA GPU-programming architecture to x86 jmke WebNews 0 23rd September 2010 13:32
ASUS M3N78-EMH HDMI Motherboard on NVIDIA GeForce 8200 Chipset piotke WebNews 0 14th June 2008 15:42
Iiyama launches 24" LCD without DVI - only D-Sub and HDMI! jmke WebNews 0 18th July 2007 12:18
Asustek launches decent Wireless HDMI jmke WebNews 0 27th March 2007 20:48
Setting up HDMI on your HDTV - nVidia vs. ATI/AMD jmke WebNews 0 22nd December 2006 18:36
Nvidia's partners can do HDMI on G71 jmke WebNews 0 7th April 2006 13:06

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 14:47.


Powered by vBulletin® - Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO