GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

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GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby bowman » Tue Aug 12, 2008 3:28 pm

http://www.nvidia.com/theforcewithin
SANTA CLARA, CA—August 12, 2008—Consumers want blazing fast performance—whether blasting their way through the latest game or being socially responsible and sharing their PC’s processing power to help find cures for diseases. Today, NVIDIA Corporation, the worldwide leader in visual computing technologies, just made this easier by releasing a set of non-graphics applications that utilize the power of its GeForce® graphics cards. Included in the GeForce Power Pack are Stanford University’s Folding@home distributed-computing, protein-folding client and a trial version of Elemental Technologies’ Badaboom video transcoder. Available for download today at no-cost at http://www.nvidia.com/theforcewithin, these are part of a growing number of applications that use the power of NVIDIA GeForce® graphics processing units (GPU) and NVIDIA® CUDA™ C-programming technology to significantly improve the performance of non-graphics applications by transferring the workload from the CPU to the more efficient GPU.

All of the 80 million plus GeForce 8 Series and higher GPUs in the field are CUDA-enabled, the largest installed base of general-purpose, parallel-computing processors ever created. The same GPU architecture that delivers stunning onscreen computer graphics in video games is also ideal for many other types of applications. The latest generation of NVIDIA GeForce GPUs offer up to 240 processor cores, compared to a maximum of the four cores found on the highest-end CPU. Any process that can be divided into multiple elements and run in parallel can be programmed to take advantage of the massive processing potential of the GPU.

NVIDIA first released its CUDA programming technology in 2007, providing software developers a programming environment based on the industry-standard C language for easy creation of applications running on NVIDIA GPUs. Numerous commercial and scientific applications have adopted CUDA technology and now consumer applications are starting to emerge that take advantage of the technology.

“CUDA has the potential be a disruptive force in both the GPU and CPU industries,” says Anand Shimpi, CEO and editor-in-chief of AnandTech.com. “Apps like Badaboom, that solve significant problems for the home PC user, could give NVIDIA hardware a significant advantage over other GPUs and it points to the need for consumers to optimize their PCs so they have both decent CPU and GPU power.”

Elemental Technologies’ Badaboom is a video transcoding program that converts video files into other formats. For example, the program can convert an MPEG file to play on an iPod or other portable device. Video transcoding can be one of the most time-consuming tasks in home computing. Converting a two-hour movie, for instance, can take six or more hours when using the computer’s CPU. However, with Badaboom on the GPU, the conversion process can be up to 18 times faster than traditional methods, getting the job done in a few minutes and, in the meantime, also freeing the CPU to handle other tasks like email and Web browsing.

Tackling the intense processing demands of ongoing medical research, Stanford University’s Folding@home distributed computing program, gives consumers the opportunity to share their computer processing power in an effort to help find a cure for disease. Running up to 140 times faster on an NVIDIA GPU over a CPU, Folding@home makes use of idle computer cycles to perform scientific calculations. Folding@home studies protein folding, where proteins in our bodies assemble themselves. Biologists simulate protein folding in order to understand how proteins fold so quickly and reliably, and to discover what happens if they do not fold correctly. Diseases such as Alzheimer's, cystic fibrosis, BSE (Mad Cow disease), an inherited form of emphysema, and many cancers are believed to result from protein misfolding. The Folding@home client is a free program that runs in the background of the PC, allowing ordinary people to have a real impact in the search for a cure of these diseases.

The Quadro Plex D Series VCS will be available in September 2008 with prices beginning at $10,750.

The CUDA-enabled content from this first GeForce Power Pack are available for free from http://www.nvidia.com/theforcewithin. More information on the Badaboom video transcoder can be found at http://www.badaboomit.com and more information about Folding@home can be found at http://folding.stanford.edu.

http://www.nvidia.com/object/io_1218525021960.html

New 177.83 drivers are included in the pack for all CUDA-capable GPUs. I'm just glad to finally see NVIDIA officially advertise the folding client. Maybe we'll see more uptake now.
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby cavyman » Tue Aug 12, 2008 4:55 pm

Are the included 177.83 drivers the next set of CUDA capable beta drivers or are they the latest official CUDA capable drivers? On the http://www.nvidia.com/object/cuda_get.html site, I'm still seeing the 177.35 driver as the latest "official" CUDA driver.
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby DjSoulshot » Tue Aug 12, 2008 5:46 pm

The latest CUDA drivers, the rest of the site just hadn't been updated yet :)
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby MtM » Tue Aug 12, 2008 6:20 pm

I hope they improve fah performance :D
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby SolidSteel144 » Tue Aug 12, 2008 6:41 pm

Damn it... If only I had an nVidia card to do this. :(
*looks for hacks to get it working on an ATi card* ;)
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby MtM » Tue Aug 12, 2008 7:38 pm

Why does this powerpack include the 6.20 nvidia client? Not really an upgrade if you ask me :(

I know, wrong place to be expecting a fah client update but I was hoping on improved cuda performance. Maybe it's still there, only way to find out is to install those drivers :)

Download going pretty fast, they either have enough bandwidth or no one is aware their available lol :)
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby SolidSteel144 » Tue Aug 12, 2008 7:45 pm

MtM wrote:Why does this powerpack include the 6.20 nvidia client? Not really an upgrade if you ask me :(

I know, wrong place to be expecting a fah client update but I was hoping on improved cuda performance. Maybe it's still there, only way to find out is to install those drivers :)

Download going pretty fast, they either have enough bandwidth or no one is aware their available lol :)

6.20 is the latest version...
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby MtM » Tue Aug 12, 2008 8:00 pm

It wasn't ment to say it's not the latest, just that's it's not really an upgrade and though it's offcourse the wrong place to hope for anything out off the blue I was still having some hope on something really good. Which is why I'm still hoping on improved CUDA performance in this driver version :)
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby uncle_fungus » Tue Aug 12, 2008 8:04 pm

The powerpack installers for FAH will never be more up-to-date than the ones we provide since we're the ones who build them.

The only real difference between the "stanford" and "nv" installers is that the "nv" one doesn't include the CAL dlls or ati related viewer files, and the viewer is slightly different as it was provided by NVIDIA.
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby MtM » Tue Aug 12, 2008 8:34 pm

But the CUDA part can be diffrent right? CUDA is an API, sometimes when they get updated they mean a potential speed increase so there still could be a performance gain to be had OUTSIDE off stanford's clients I think.
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby uncle_fungus » Tue Aug 12, 2008 8:45 pm

The CUDA drivers can be different, yes, but the runtimes with the client are the same. The "nv" client isn't linked to powerpack in any way, so if you install the powerpack drivers, the "Stanford" client will see the same performance difference (if any).
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby MtM » Tue Aug 12, 2008 9:16 pm

Ok misunderstanding here I think and I'll blame my english. But the client does use CUDA, and the powerpack includes an updated CUDA version?

If so, it 'could' impact like you say if CUDA's performance in the functions used by the client binary has increased. Now I know since I did read some about this that the CUDA extensions are more about a couple off added arithmetic functions and not a performance update so I'm not saying it either will or will not impact folding ( you would know, you know the functions the client uses.. I could throw it through a dissasembler or do a string search out of curiousity :) ) just that it could potentially do so.
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby rbpeake » Tue Aug 12, 2008 9:18 pm

uncle_fungus wrote:The CUDA drivers can be different, yes, but the runtimes with the client are the same. The "nv" client isn't linked to powerpack in any way, so if you install the powerpack drivers, the "Stanford" client will see the same performance difference (if any).

So to get down to basics, if we are just folding there is no need for us to update to this new power pack (that is, we should just keep what we are running and do nothing)?

Thanks!
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby uncle_fungus » Tue Aug 12, 2008 9:25 pm

Not necessarily. If you already have the client installed there is no point downloading the nv version unless you want to use their viewer. If you want to test the new drivers that are included in powerpack, then go right ahead. And do make sure you tell us if they make a difference ;)
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Re: GPU compute 'Power Pack' (new drivers, etc)

Postby Edboard » Tue Aug 12, 2008 9:45 pm

I have installed driver 177.83 and it goes slightly slower than 177.35 in my computer. 3-4% less PPD.
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