With pre-SP1, I got somewhere around 45GFLOPS, but definitely not 50+, and it is factual that Intel CPUs have gotten more efficient per clock on each generation. So linpack probably doesn't scale as well per clock.
OK, just figured I would continue on this thread. I was going through my settings and saw a spot that read "Total available graphics memory: 4094 MB".
My card is a "Dedicated video memory: 1023 MB GDDR5".
Why and how is "Shared system memory: 3071 MB"?
Not complaining, just wondering about the odd numbers.
NVIDIA System Information report created on: 06/17/2012 16:23:59
System name: **********
[Display]
Operating System: Windows 7 Home Premium, 64-bit (Service Pack 1)
DirectX version: 11.0
GPU processor: GeForce GTX 560 Ti
Driver version: 301.42
DirectX support: 11.1
CUDA Cores: 384
Core clock: 822 MHz
Shader clock: 1645 MHz
Memory clock: 2004 MHz (4008 MHz data rate)
Memory interface: 256-bit
Total available graphics memory: 4094 MB
Dedicated video memory: 1023 MB GDDR5
System video memory: 0 MB
Shared system memory: 3071 MB
Video BIOS version: 70.24.35.00.02
IRQ: 18
Bus: PCI Express x16 Gen2
This is only my opinion, I could be wrong. Motherboard - ASUS D500TD Chipset Intel® B660 Procesor - 12th Gen Intel Core i5-12400 2.50 GHz(18M Cache, up to 4.4 GHz, 6 cores, 12 threads) Ram - PNY 2x8GB (16GB total) DDR4 Video card - Onboard Intel UHD Graphics 730 Graphics Processor Alder Lake - Cores 192 - Base Clock 300 MHz Boost Clock 1400 MHz - 128 bit - Display - VIZIO 32" E32-C1 YV @ 1080P 60Hz Sound - Realtek High Definition Audio w/ Logitech X-540 5.1 speakers Power Supply - 300W power supply (80+ Bronze, peak 350W) HDD 1 - 512GB M.2 2280 NVMe™ PCIe® 4.0 SSD HDD 2 - Western Digital WDC_WD10 1TB Printer - Epson ET-3850 OS - Windows 11 Home x64
Mine says the same thing and I never really thought about it :\ Google gets a lot of laptop GPU results which make more sense as those are much more likely to actually use shared RAM... Maybe its existence here is just a placeholder so their universal driver implementation doesn't need to have as many exceptions.
For computers, buying cheaply and often will only leave you constantly in a world of shit.