- #EVGA OPENGL 4.3 SOFTWARE LICENSE#
- #EVGA OPENGL 4.3 DRIVER#
- #EVGA OPENGL 4.3 WINDOWS 10#
- #EVGA OPENGL 4.3 PRO#
- #EVGA OPENGL 4.3 LICENSE#
(SGI) began developing OpenGL in 1991 and released it on Japplications use it extensively in the fields of computer-aided design (CAD), virtual reality, scientific visualization, information visualization, flight simulation, and video games. The API is typically used to interact with a graphics processing unit (GPU), to achieve hardware-accelerated rendering. OpenGL ( Open Graphics Library ) is a cross-language, cross-platform application programming interface (API) for rendering 2D and 3D vector graphics.
#EVGA OPENGL 4.3 LICENSE#
Trademark license for new licensees who want to use the OpenGL trademark and logo and claim conformance.
#EVGA OPENGL 4.3 SOFTWARE LICENSE#
: This is a Free Software License B closely modeled on BSD, X, and Mozilla licenses.
#EVGA OPENGL 4.3 DRIVER#
We're using driver build 441.20 for the Nvidia cards and Adrenalin 2020 Edition 19.12.2 for AMD cards, although the 5600 XT was tested using 20.1.2 beta drivers. These titles represent a broad spectrum of genres and APIs, which gives us a good idea of the performance differences between the cards. Our list of test games is currently Tom Clancy's The Division 2, Ghost Recon: Breakpoint, Borderlands 3, Gears of War 5, Strange Brigade, Shadow of the Tomb Raider, Far Cry 5, Metro Exodus, Final Fantasy XIV: Shadowbringers, Forza Horizon 4 and Battlefield V. For Nvidia, we've included an EVGA GTX 1660 Ti XC, RTX 2060 Founders Edition and RTX 2060 Super Founders Edition for comparison. On the AMD side, that consists of the Gigabyte RX 5600 XT Gaming OC and a reference Radeon RX 5700. For these individual third-party card reviews, we include GPUs that compete with and are close in performance to the card being reviewed. Our GPU hierarchy provides a complete overview of graphics cards and how the various models stack up against each other.
#EVGA OPENGL 4.3 WINDOWS 10#
The latest version of Windows 10 (1909) is used and is fully updated as of February 2020. No other BIOS changes or performance enhancements were enabled. We then enabled the memory's XMP profile to get the memory running at the rated 3200 MHz CL16 specification. Optimized defaults were used to set up the system. The motherboard is running BIOS version 7B12v16.
#EVGA OPENGL 4.3 PRO#
The following table summarizes the specifications of Nvidia GPUs and the RTX 2060 KO Ultra Gaming:Ĭorsair 2x16GB DDR4-3200 CL16 (opens in new tab)Ĭorsair Hydro H150i Pro RGB (opens in new tab)
![evga opengl 4.3 evga opengl 4.3](https://cdn.videocardz.net/cache/fb9747406f67a316a761832fe0422cea-1200x900.jpg)
EVGA recommends at least a 500W power supply. Feeding power to the VRMs is a single 8-pin PCIe connector. Actual power use will vary between partner cards, due to higher clock speeds and where the power limit is set. This value is less than the 180W AMD RX 5700 and more than the 150W of the RX 5600 XT. The EVGA RTX 2060 KO Ultra Gaming specifies 160W for power consumption. This configuration yields 336 GBps bandwidth. The memory speed of 14 Gbps (1,750 MHz) matches the reference part, as do most other cards from board partners.
![evga opengl 4.3 evga opengl 4.3](https://www.proshop.se/Images/915x900/2391306_d4c34ec40758.jpg)
On the memory side, the KO Ultra Gaming includes the same 6GB of Samsung-made GDDR6, which sits on a 192-bit bus. The latter is a 75 MHz bump over reference speeds (1,365/1,680 MHz base/boost respectively), and the clock speed increase will bring better performance than a reference-clocked card. This means a 17% drop in ray tracing core count, tensor core count, TMUs and in the L0/L1 cache.Ĭlock speeds on the KO Ultra Gaming are set at 1,365 MHz base with a boost rated to 1,755 MHz.
![evga opengl 4.3 evga opengl 4.3](https://cdn.mwave.com.au/images/400/AB66856.jpg)
Since the Turing architecture scales with the number of SMs, all core compute values scale down with it. This yields 1,920 shaders, 48 ROPs and 120 TMUs. The RTX 2060 KO and KO Ultra feature a 30 SM configuration versus the RTX 2060 Super's 34 SMs and the RTX 2070’s 36 SMs. The die is manufactured using TSMC’s 12nm FinFET Nvidia (FFN) process, placing 13.6 billion transistors in a 545 mm² area. TU104 is larger and has more solder points than TU106, so manufacturers can't use the same board for both chips. That makes sense, as the PCB is physically different from a regular 2060 card. However, an EVGA rep told us the KO card “.is and will continue to be TU104 for the foreseeable future”. According to an email we received from EVGA, the answer no. Those considering this card for compute tasks like Blender may be wondering if there’s a way to tell before buying what die is under the hood. However, as other sites have shown, when rendering in Blender, the card performs better than its namesake, landing between the RTX 2060 FE and the RTX 2070 Super Founders Edition. For gaming purposes, this is simply an RTX 2060. The odd choice of underlying silicon here is an interesting fact, but it has few real-world implications.