Jensen confirma: La compatibilidad con NVLink en Ada Lovelace se ha ido



El CEO de NVIDIA, Jensen Huang, en una llamada con la prensa hoy confirmó que Ada pierde el conector NVLink. Esto marca el final de cualquier posibilidad de multi-GPU explícito, and marks the complete demise of SLI (over a separate physical interface). Jensen stated that the reason behind removing the NVLink connector was because they needed the I/O for "something else," and decided against spending the resources to wire out an NVLink interface. NVIDIA’s engineers also wanted to make the most out of the silicon area at their disposal to "cram in as much AI processing as we could". Jen-Hsun continued with "and also, because Ada is based on Gen 5, Generación PCIe 5, we now have the ability to do peer-to-peer cross-Gen 5 that’s sufficiently fast that it was a better tradeoff". We reached out to NVIDIA to confirm and their answer is:

NVIDIAAda does not support PCIe Gen 5, but the Gen 5 power connector is included.

Generación PCIe 4 provides plenty of bandwidth for graphics usages today, so we felt it wasn’t necessary to implement Gen 5 for this generation of graphics cards. The large framebuffers and large L2 caches of Ada GPUs also reduce utilization of the PCIe interface.