Showing posts with label nvidia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nvidia. Show all posts

Monday, 11 April 2022

Nvidia’s GeForce Now doesn’t require sign-in to try the latest cloud gaming offerings

 https://thesiliconreview.com/2022/04/nvidias-geforce-now-cloud-gaming-offerings


GeForce Now from Nvidia is pushing demos for games with reduced friction like Ghostrunner, Chorus, Diplomacy, The Riftbreaker, Diplomacy is Not an Option, and Inscryption

We all know that cloud isn’t for everyone right now as it needs more development for widespread adoption, but we do know that it is getting easier to tell if it is for you. This is because Google and Nvidia are now allowing people to test their virtual gaming PCs for free. Search engine giant Google has recently made an announcement that it will be now offering limited access to the free trial of its games without the need for a Google account.


GeForce Now from Nvidia is pushing demos for games with reduced friction like Ghostrunner, Chorus, Diplomacy, The Riftbreaker, Diplomacy is Not an Option, and Inscryption. What you have to do now to play the games is log in to your Nvidia account and again to Epic Games, Steam, or Ubisoft account to play these games’ demo on GeForce Now. Users have to manually search for games to play. 

You will instantly have access to demos without the need for a second login. VP and GM of Nvidia’s cloud gaming division Phil Eisler has stated that the company will accept any free demo. He furthermore added that they would ask only if the full version of the game would be made available for players to access later on GeForce Now.  


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Monday, 26 April 2021

 

NVIDIA Outperforms the Latest Artificial Intelligence Benchmarking Tests

In the third round of submission, MLCommons recently released the results for MLPerf Inference. It is a set of standard AI inference benchmarking tests using seven different applications. These seven tests are predominantly based on the range of workloads that include computer vision, medical imaging, recommender systems, and natural language processing. The test mainly measures how fast the neural network can process data from each application.

In the results announced, the NVIDIA A100 GPU was the highest performing accelerator in each application. The company submitted each and every offline and server data scenario. It outperformed the much-impressive Qualcomm AI 100 in every aspect and also by an extensive margin. NVIDIA's edge GPUs - A100 PCIe and A100 SXM-was also introduced. The company submitted Jetson Xavier NX and Jetson AGX Xavier with a higher performance than the NX version. 

NVIDIA's all-new A100 has 80 GB of memory, and it provides over two terabytes per second of memory bandwidth, which is the highest for any AI-based company. With enhanced power, it is known that the applications cannot fully utilize A100 capabilities. It separated the GPU into seven isolated instances to create the biggest MIG. Along with Qualcomm, Centaur also had submissions. Again, NVIDIA dominated the performance landscape in every case.