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Nvidia Computex 2022: everything you need to know


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Summary

The broadcast kicked off at 8PM PT on May 23 (11PM ET, or 4AM May 24 BST) which could be considered outside of sociable hours for most of us, but luckily we've rounded up all of the important information from the event so you're not missing out on sleep OR on Team Greens presentation.Our own Computing Editor covered the event as it happened in our Nvidia Computex liveblog if you want to feel like you're watching the event in real-time, otherwise, we're going to lay out everything you need to know from the broadcast.Of course, Nvidia isn't the only company presenting at Computex this year, so we would also recommend checking out the full Computex roundup for information on what brands like AMD are bringing to the table.Nvidia's Grace CPU and Hopper Superchips are set for release in early 2023, and while this will be of little interest to Nvidias PC gaming audience, this is especially exciting news for anyone working with datacentres or machine learning.Nvidia announced during its keynote that Taiwan’s leading computer makers are set to release the first wave of systems powered by the Nvidia Grace CPU Superchip and Grace Hopper Superchip that was teased last year. The new 144-core Arm Neoverse-based discrete data center CPU is actually comprised of two CPU chips connected over the company's high-speed, low-latency, chip-to-chip (C2C) interconnect, NVLink.All of the four reference systems shown during the stream are powered by Nvidia's Arm-compatible Grace and Grace-Hopper Superchips announced at GTC earlier this year.We were hoping that Nvidia would throw us some scraps of information about its upcoming Lovelace RTX 40 series of graphics cards, set to succeed the current Ampere range, though unfortunately not even a morsel was provided.Still, the keynote did have some news that should appeal to the gaming community, such as a list of games that are being upgraded to include features such as DLSS, Nvidia Reflex and ray tracing.Details are provided on the Nvidia website, which states that "Since the launch of DLSS, over 180 games and applications have added the tech", alongside some video clips that compare the performance of these new games both with and without DLSS enabled.You'll find the full list of games getting DLSS below:Nvidia also mentioned that Reflex, a feature that can lower your system latency by combining both GPU and game optimizations, is coming to four new titles.

As said here by Jess Weatherbed