Unfortunately we need to be careful what we wish for. As AI processing becomes more and more popular, if a card like the RTX 4070 had 20 GB vram they would probably all be snatched up by companies to use for AI processing on the cheap, and suddenly 4070 and higher all go for $2000 like the mining craze all over again.
I doubt any big, mainstream western corporations would use GeForce cards for AI, even if they have the same amount of vRAM as workstation cards (and they’d never have the same memory as AI-specific cards such as the H100). Hobbyists will for sure, but they make up such a tiny portion of the market that I doubt it would change the overall demand. Chinese and Russian companies will, I guess, but I don’t think that would have the same effect as crypto mining, which has immediate returns without any expertise for individual users, unlike AI applications.
Hobbyists, sure. Startups, maybe (from what I’ve seen, they’re far more likely to rent a server or something). Mainstream corporations, definitely not.
NVLink is no longer supported on the Ada Lovelace GPU architecture that powers Nvidia’s flagship RTX 4090 graphics. Replacing NVLink is the PCIe Gen 5 standard. Nvidia will use the freed up space from the removal of NVLink to cram in more AI processing capabilities.
If they were readily available they would be a tempting option! But no, Nvidia continue to be frugal with vram in the consumer space…
Unfortunately we need to be careful what we wish for. As AI processing becomes more and more popular, if a card like the RTX 4070 had 20 GB vram they would probably all be snatched up by companies to use for AI processing on the cheap, and suddenly 4070 and higher all go for $2000 like the mining craze all over again.
I doubt any big, mainstream western corporations would use GeForce cards for AI, even if they have the same amount of vRAM as workstation cards (and they’d never have the same memory as AI-specific cards such as the H100). Hobbyists will for sure, but they make up such a tiny portion of the market that I doubt it would change the overall demand. Chinese and Russian companies will, I guess, but I don’t think that would have the same effect as crypto mining, which has immediate returns without any expertise for individual users, unlike AI applications.
Plenty of people using 4090s tho
Hobbyists, sure. Startups, maybe (from what I’ve seen, they’re far more likely to rent a server or something). Mainstream corporations, definitely not.
Exactly, even though Nvidia removed NVLink it’s still a popular card for deep learning coz it’s relatively cheap for small labs.
NVLink died because PCIE Gen5 can handle incorrect now, no external hardware needed.
PCIe 5.0 cannot do what NVLink does, and NVLink isn’t dead at all.
https://www.windowscentral.com/hardware/computers-desktops/nvidia-kills-off-nvlink-on-rtx-4090#:~:text=NVLink is no longer supported,in more AI processing capabilities.
The RTX A6000 ADA also drops nvlink. No idea why the downvotes
Why wouldn’t they?
Official support, drivers, bulk orders direct from Nvidia, staying on Nvidia’s good side