As an engineer I typically only see a lot of things on the surface and don't really dig too deep into the finite technical aspects of everything.
I am just wondering if somebody could break down or explain how substantial the gains can be from the unified memory architecture versus the way everything has been done in the past.
I know that the main processor and the GPU can now communicate much faster, but how does that relate to performance gains?
Are there any examples of this architecture in the PC market? Has anybody developed software in the past to take advantage of something like this?
I am just wondering if somebody could break down or explain how substantial the gains can be from the unified memory architecture versus the way everything has been done in the past.
I know that the main processor and the GPU can now communicate much faster, but how does that relate to performance gains?
Are there any examples of this architecture in the PC market? Has anybody developed software in the past to take advantage of something like this?