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Finally! MacOS drivers for Pascal
Nice to see this but surely this is only of use for Hackintosh builds? Or is Thunderbolt connectivity supported for external GPUs?
The very old Pro, and external GPUs:

>Currently Mac users are limited to Maxwell GPUs from the company’s 9-series cards, but next week we’ll be able to finally experience Pascal, albeit a $1200 Pascal model, on the Mac.

>We have reached out to Nvidia for a statement about compatibility down the line with lesser 10-series cards, and I’m happy to report that Nvidia states that all Pascal-based GPUs will be Mac-enabled via upcoming drivers. This means that you will be able to use a GTX 1080, for instance, on a Mac system via an eGPU setup, or with a Hackintosh build.

https://9to5mac.com/2017/04/06/nvidia-titan-xp-beta-pascal-d...

Thats awesome, I was thinking about putting a hackintosh build together with a spare 1070 I have laying around.
More likely for the iMac/MacPro fresh. Apple doesn't officially supports external GPUs and iirc it only will work on an Apple device in boot camp since the TB drivers don't work on OSX.
Tell me about it. I've been waiting to pull the trigger on a 1080 for a while now.
Maybe a sign of things to come for the new iMac or MBP refresh?
Also the previous Pascal Titan appears to be dropped from the 10 series webpage[1], although it's not hard to find [2]. So it looks like this replaces the old card entirely. I've not followed the consumer GPU market too closely as of late, is this normal for Nvidia? Or have they perhaps got yields up to better level?

[1] http://www.geforce.co.uk/hardware/10series/

[2] http://www.geforce.co.uk/hardware/10series/titan-x/

The 1080 Ti was marginally faster than the previous Titan, while being significantly cheaper. This is a small spec bump to put the Titan back on top, so that people with money to burn still have an excuse to give Nvidia $1200 rather than $700.

If you ask me the 1080 Ti is still a better choice, but there are always a few people out there who just have to have the very fastest thing and Nvidia is happy to take their money.

I wonder when the Linux drivers will be out. I'm running dual 1070s powering a single Dell 5K on my Arch Linux desktop machine and it's amazing.
What do you play on it?
Probably freeciv or openTTD, but on medium settings.
Serious question- what benefit do you get out of this? I had an SLI setup with Linux for awhile as well, before realizing that the second GPU was never being tapped into at all. It's recognized, and is getting power, but it's wholly under-utilized (if at all).

From everything I've found, Linux doesn't benefit from SLI nearly as much Windows can.

I've used several multi-GPU (up to 8x K40) Linux machines, and if your application can provide enough GPU work (say ML/AI, or physics simulations, etc.) they scale perfectly. For gaming, I don't know, but could be GP is doing non-gaming stuff.
I hope you write cuda code with that.
So finally I can get a 1080ti now.
Does this also mean we will finally get mac drivers for the new cards? (Hello Hackintosh Community)
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Does anyone have any idea, or even educated guess on if and when we might see a price drop on other, now ""outdated"" (not really) GPUs? I was just starting to plan building a desktop with plenty of CUDA cores, and now that this has come out I'm wondering if I should wait a few weeks or a month to see if prices fall.