Nvidia GRID

Family of GPUs by Nvidia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nvidia GRID was a family of graphics processing units (GPUs) made by Nvidia, introduced in 2008, that were targeted specifically towards GPU virtualization and cloud gaming.[1] The Nvidia GRID includes both graphics processing and video encoding into a single device which is able to decrease the input to display latency of cloud based video game streaming.[2] It was previously used by Nvidia's GeForce Now, a paid cloud gaming service.

This GRID K1 GPU provides VDI for four seats using four independent GK107 GPUs with 4 GB of graphics memory each.

While many of Nvidia’s cards are known for gaming, there has been a recent growth of business applications that are GPU-accelerated.[timeframe?] The Nvidia GRID K1 and K2 are being integrated with Supermicro server clusters for use with 3D-intensive applications such as graphics and computer aided design (CAD).[3] In 2015, Microsoft began including Nvidia GRID as part of its Azure Enterprise cloud platform targeted towards professionals such as engineers, designers and researchers.[4]

More information GRID K1, Grid K2 ...
Specifications[5][6][7]
GRID K1Grid K2
Microarchitecture Kepler
Number of GPUs 4× GK1072× GK104
Number of CUDA cores 4× 1922× 1536
Memory site 4× 4 GB DDR32× 4 GB GDDR5
Max power 130 W225 W
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