Graphics Processing Unit: R.Raghu Ram 15P35A0419 Ivece3 T.Devi (M.Tech
Graphics Processing Unit: R.Raghu Ram 15P35A0419 Ivece3 T.Devi (M.Tech
* MOTHERBOARD
* GRAPHICS PROCESSOR
* MEMORY
* DISPLAY CONNECTOR
Working
The images you see on your monitor are made of tiny
dots called pixels. At most common resolution
settings, a screen displays over a million pixels, and the
computer has to decide what to do with every one in
order to create an image. To do this, it needs a
translator something to take binary data from the CPU
and turn it into a picture you can see. Unless a
computer has graphics capability built into the
motherboard, that translation takes place on the
graphics card
Working Continues
The CPU sends information about the image to the
graphics card. The graphics card decides how to use the
pixels on the screen to create the image. It then sends that
information to the monitor through a cable
RAM
As the GPU creates images, it needs somewhere to hold
information and completed pictures. It uses the card's RAM for
this purpose, storing data about each pixel, its color and its
location on the screen
PCI Connection
Graphics cards connect to the computer through the
motherboard. The motherboard supplies power to the
card and lets it communicate with the CPU. PCI Express is
the newest form of connection and provides the fastest
transfer rates between the graphics card and the
motherboard
Specifications
A good overall measurement of a card's performance is
its frame rate, measured in frames per second (FPS). The
frame rate describes how many complete images the card can
display per second. The human eye can process about 25
frames every second, but fast action games require a frame
rate of at least 60 FPS to provide smooth animation and
scrolling
Host interface
Vertex processing
Triangle setup
Pixel processing
Memory Interface
*NVIDIA
*ATI/AMD
*INTEL
APPLICATIONS
LATEST GPU AVAILABLE IN MARKET
NVIDIA GEFORCE Gtx 980 Ti