The Nvidia driver for Linux has reached the 370 series by releasing the 370.23 beta driver. TITAN X (Pascal) and GTX 1060 6GB are officially supported. Over- and under-clock GPUs feature added for GTX 1000 series and later. Apr 6, 2017 - NVIDIA's latest graphics card is the NVIDIA TITAN Xp, a GPU with more cores, faster clocks, faster memory, and more TFLOPS than the TITAN X that. Before these new drivers are released, Mac users can only use up to. Additional alternate units will be available from 3rd-party system builders soon.
Here are the stats for the new Titan Xp GPU:. 12GB of GDDR5X memory running at 11.4 Gbps. 3,840 CUDA cores running at 1.6GHz.
12 TFLOPs of brute force The Titan line now takes its rightful place at the top of the heap shortly after the announcement of the GTX 1080 Ti. More importantly, for Mac users, Nvidia is focused on delivering needed the latest GPU power to the Mac community: Speaking of users, we’re also making the new TITAN Xp open to the Mac community with new beta Pascal drivers, coming this month. For the first time, this gives Mac users access to the immense horsepower delivered by our award-winning Pascal-powered GPUs. This is an extremely exciting revelation for Mac users who require the power provided by the latest graphics architecture. 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. Exciting times, indeed.
To that end, the Titan Xp is also compatible with Macs, which often find their way into the studios of professionals with immense processing demands. The card is available for sale now directly from Nvidia, and the company plans to release Mac-compatible drivers later this month. Once it does, the Titan Xp will be the first card based on the Pascal architecture to support Apple computers. For Mac users who don't need the Titan Xp's flagship performance, Nvidia said the new drivers will also enable support for all Pascal GPUs, including the GTX 1080 Ti, which is several hundred dollars cheaper. In addition to (which has a limit of two per customer), customers will also be able to order systems with a Titan Xp pre-installed; Nvidia says those PCs will be on the market soon.