It feels like a lifetime since Nvidia’s second-gen RTX series of graphics cards rolled out of the fab. Maybe it’s because that was back in September of 2020, and for a lot of different reasons, those two intervening years might as well have been a lifetime. But if you’ve been patiently waiting for a new chip design, you won’t need to wait much longer: Nvidia has sent out invitations to a “GeForce Beyond Special Broadcast,” where we expect to see the RTX 4000 series debuted.
The event will be held on Tuesday, September 2022 at Nvidia’s self-branded GPU Technology Conference, better known as GTC. CEO Jensen Huang, a familiar face for PC nerds everywhere, will be giving his usual keynote presentation. Set your clocks for 11 a.m. Eastern time or 8 a.m. Pacific if you want to watch the livestream. Of course PCWorld will bring you the news and analysis directly, if you happen to have something better to do during the announcement.
The invitation specifically features the GeForce RTX logo, as opposed to Nvidia’s various other brands, and tells us to be ready for “the latest breakthroughs in gaming, creating, and graphics technology.” It’s about as close to a confirmation as these things ever officially get.
Official details for next-gen RTX processors and cards are scarce, but we can glean a few probable features from the announcement of the data center-focused “Hopper” GPU back in March. RTX 4xxx cards will almost certainly support a PCIe 5.0 interface (at least on the high end), and the rumored “Lovelace” class of GPUs might also move to a more efficient fabrication process, either 5nm or 4nm (the RTX 3000 series used 8nm). Other rumors suggest high bumps in core counts, heat production, and power consumption, possibly necessitating new power supplies or conversion rails.
If Nvidia follows its usual release process, you can expect high-end cards like a presumptive RTX 4090, 4080, and 4070 to be ready before the end of the year, with cheaper variants and upgraded “Ti” variants trickling in during the first half of 2023. That’s all speculation, of course. Perhaps more crucially, we can hope that the lowered pressure on the GPU market as variables like pandemic shortages, cryptocurrency hardware rushes, and unscrupulous scalpers mean you’ll actually be able to buy one of these new cards without selling any arms and/or legs.
Author: Michael Crider, Staff Writer
Michael is a former graphic designer who’s been building and tweaking desktop computers for longer than he cares to admit. His interests include folk music, football, science fiction, and salsa verde, in no particular order.
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