Showing posts with label Intel XDK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Intel XDK. Show all posts

Sunday, October 25, 2015

#96 NVIDIA Pascal GPU Has 17 Billion Transistors and 32GB of VRAM, Packs Incredible Performance


GPUs, or Graphic Processing Units, popularized by NVIDIA in 1999, were a step towards accelerated computing to fasten memory intensive works like scientific analyses, engineering models, energy efficient data centers. And now, these processing units also come as separate graphic cards mostly famous for hardcore gaming.

NVIDIA in 2016 will announce their next gen NVIDIA Pascal GPU with an introduction of new technologies. A successor to Maxwell GPU, these new NVIDIA Pascal GPU processors will have the latest HBM2 and 16nm FinFET designs. The new NVIDIA Pascal GPU is believed to have whopping 17 billion transistor networks in its processing unit. These are almost double than on NVIDIA’a previous GM200 Maxwell that has 8 billion transistors and Fiji’s graphic processor that has 8.9 billion transistors.

The number of transistors in NVIDIA Pascal GPU assure of the best performing processing cores ever. The FinFET design technology increases the density of the transistors on the core by two times. Well, that’s the same thing that happened here. Also, the increased speed of above 60 percent and 70% less power consumption makes these GPUs’ wait worth it.

Along with the 17 billion transistors embedded into the core, the Pascal GPUs will also have access to up to 32 GB HBM memory across a 4096 bit memory interface. The new generation NVIDIA Pascal GPU cores have much more bandwidth compared to AMD’s Fiji and other graphic cards.

NVLINK is a unified Virtual Memory link with Gen 2.0 cache coherency features and the bandwidth increased to almost 5-12 times in comparison to general PCIe connection which will be introduced by the NVIDIA Pascal GPU. NVLINK will enable the connection of parallel GPUs that will enhance the performance in PCs for gaming and professional purposes.

The NVIDIA Pascal GPU promises incredible processing and for you an amazing user experience. The company plans to further exceed its computing prowess with Volta GPU with 150 Petaflops of performance and will be launched in 2017.

For more updates and interesting stories from PowerTech & Powertechmation, Stay connected with us. 

Monday, March 2, 2015

#28 Intel XDK Update

Intel XDK Update - HTML5 Games, Sublime Text* & Easier to Get Started







We are gearing up for two of the biggest shows of the year: Game Developers Conference (GDC) in San Francisco and Mobile World Conference (MWC) in Barcelona, Spain - both the week of March 2. Come look for us in the Intel® Software booths at the shows - stop by and get an Intel XDK sticker! (We'll find some ways to get them to those of you not going to the shows, too.)



As you hopefully saw in our December 2014 release, we introduced support for many HTML5 game engines: Construct2*, Cocos2D*, Phaser*, EaselJS* part of a CreateJS* suite of libraries, and Pixi*, an asset manager to help with manipulating and coding images and animation, and added several new Apache Cordova* plugins for in-app purchasing, ads, Leaderboards, etc. to help monetize your games.



One of our users is creating a new HTML5 Gaming Course. Check out: The Complete Mobile Game Development Course on Kickstarter* - a comprehensive video tutorial that will teach you how to create 15 HTML5 mobile games using JavaScript + the free Phaser library, and how to publish them to iOS*, Android* and Amazon* using the Intel XDK.



This latest update of Intel XDK continues to improve the HTML5 gaming support in time for GDC, but also includes several other important things:


Support for Sublime* Text editor: We know that many of our users find the greatest value of the Intel XDK in its ability to preview, test, and debug on-device prior to building the app, and many prefer to use their favorite editor while doing so. We made that easier for Sublime Text users with a package to Sublime Text that drive the testing and debugging options with the Intel XDK. Here is a link to the Sublime Text package for the Intel XDK.



We changed the "getting started" options for new app projects to make it even easier to start creating different kinds of HTML5 projects. We heard from users that we had too many choices to get started, and that it wasn't clear how to create an app without Cordova (a web app). Well, we changed it. We introduced the option to choose a blank "Standard HTML5" app without Cordova and plugins included, and an "HTML5 + Cordova" app already set up for Cordova. Of course, in the project settings, you can go back and add Cordova and plugins to the project as you need, as well as easily choose the targeted platforms.



We added Cordova* 4. x and Crosswalk 11 support to stay on top of the latest developments in the Apache* Cordova and Crosswalk Projects. Most of the changes are behind the scene in project set up and build-time. All you need to do is specify the version you want to use in the Build settings.
Added OS X* Yosemite as a validated platform for hosting the Intel XDK.



All of these changes also apply to the Intel XDK IoT Edition. We also added the ability to easily update the communication daemon for the Intel® IoT Developer Kit with one-click to keep connected.



Finally, this is just a heads-up. In March we're going to be rolling out some changes to improve security, and move the user forums. First, we have a user forum for Intel XDK support on the Intel Developer Zone (IDZ) site (the parent site of xdk.intel.com) that has been up for several months: Please start using it! We want to completely move off of our current Intel XDK user forums so that we can better help you, and for you to communicate with other developers. It offers a much better forum software platform that is also used by many other Intel software products and communities.



Second, we will be merging your Intel XDK accounts with the greater IDZ using a more safe/secure single sign-on infrastructure. You will finally be able to have the same account for the Intel XDK and User Forums! For those of you that do not already have an account with the Intel Developer Zone, the merge will be seamless - we'll set it up as you login to the Intel XDK. For those of you that already have an IDZ account, you may have to reset your password so that the Intel XDK and IDZ are merged properly. Finally, you will need to make sure the Intel XDK you are using is a latest version  for authentication with the latest build servers - at least version 1332 (September 2014 update) or later.
Intel XDK Update - HTML5 Games, Sublime Text* & Easier to Get Started - See more at: http://www.digit.in/apps/intel-xdk-update-html5-games-sublime-text-easier-to-get-started-25398.html#sthash.KlbktZH4.dpuf

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