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Announcing the GeForce 10 series products, Nvidia introduced Founders Edition graphics card versions of the GTX 1060, 1070, 1070 Ti, 1080 and 1080 Ti. These are what were previously known as reference cards, i.e. which were designed and built by Nvidia and not by its authorized board partners.
On November 2, 2017, Nvidia released the GeForce GTX 1070 Ti (GP104), which includes full fixed function HEVC Main10/Main12 hardware decoder. On December 11, 2017, Intel officially launched their Pentium Silver & Celeron CPUs (Gemini Lake) desktop & mobile products with full fixed function HEVC Main10 hardware decoding support.
GeForce GTX 555 May 14, 2011 GF114 1950 332 736 1472 3828 6 288:48:24 1 91.9 128+64 [e] 17.6 35.3 847.9 Unknown 150 OEM GeForce GTX 560 SE February 20, 2012 [68] GF114-200-KB-A1 [f] Unknown GeForce GTX 560 May 17, 2011 GF114-325-A1 [f] 810 1620 4008 7 336:56:32 1 2 128.1 256 25.92 45.36 1088.6 Unknown $199 GeForce GTX 560 Ti January 25, 2011
Painting of Blaise Pascal, eponym of architecture. Pascal is the codename for a GPU microarchitecture developed by Nvidia, as the successor to the Maxwell architecture. The architecture was first introduced in April 2016 with the release of the Tesla P100 (GP100) on April 5, 2016, and is primarily used in the GeForce 10 series, starting with the GeForce GTX 1080 and GTX 1070 (both using the ...
GeForce GTX TITAN X, GeForce GTX 980 Ti: GM200 VP6 E March 2015 GeForce GTX 1070, GTX 1070 Ti, GTX 1080: GP104 VP8 H May 2016 Introduced VP9 and HEVC decoding at 8K and HEVC Main 12 GeForce GTX 1060: GP106 VP8 H July 2016 NVIDIA TITAN Xp, TITAN X, GeForce GTX 1080 Ti: GP102 VP8 H August 2016 GeForce GTX 1050, GTX 1050 Ti: GP107 VP8 H October 2016
Nvidia NVDEC (formerly known as NVCUVID [1]) is a feature in its graphics cards that performs video decoding, offloading this compute-intensive task from the CPU. [2] NVDEC is a successor of PureVideo and is available in Kepler and later NVIDIA GPUs.