Links to third-party sites and references to third-party trademarks are provided for convenience and illustrative purposes only. Michael DeNeffe, AMD’s Director of Cloud Graphics and has extensive experience in network computing, and client device technologies. Where we’ve partnered with HP in booth #311, where we plan to be showcasing graphical applications such as Solidworks, Autodesk Revit and AutoCad delivered from the cloud to HP thin-clients optimized for Citrix deployments with AMD Embedded APUs.
Last, for those of you in Southern California the week of May 8-10, we will be at Citrix Synergy. If you missed it, it’s worth pencilling it in for next year and checking out the great recap on the COE website. During the event a new VR and AR Committee within COE was announced, and I think the discussions that will emerge will be worth watching. I found it exciting to see how Dassault users are integrating growing technologies into their processes, especially in areas where we at AMD are also investing in GPU applications such as VR/AR (Virtual / Augmented reality) and to support the demands of generative design for uses such as additive manufacture. This session was particularly insightful because were joined by Keith Horton from Nordam Aerospace, past president of the COE, who described their virtualized CATIA deployment using Cisco C240M5 servers, AMD FirePro™ S7150x2 server GPUs, Citrix XenServer 7.4 with MxGPU capability, and NICE DCV to manage multiple customer design environments and gain benefits in security, remote working and hardware consolidation. My speaking session covered “CATIA from the Cloud”, delivering CATIA from the datacenter with virtualized desktops, and the virtualized graphics considerations for the next generation of 3DExperience and PLM deployment, alongside some details of our S7150 products and MxGPU (shared GPU) technologies. Major companies present at the show included HP, Dell and Cisco servers and workstations, to Dassault end-customers like Boeing, Proctor and Gamble and Textron.
#Amd radeon pro full
It was great though to be amongst the full spectrum of the Dassault PLM ecosystem rather than a generic cloud or security conference. Surprisingly we were the only GPU vendor exhibiting, so we attracted a large audience.
There’s a bit more information about our collaboration with Dassault in this area in this case study.
Our stand was busy, we were showing CATIA delivered from the cloud and 3D Interactive rendering on HP and Dell. It was very insightful to hear about real deployments where our AMD products have been used across PLM deployments to enable a wide range of use cases including: It was a wonderful opportunity to look at the overall solutions our products enable within the wider ecosystem while focussing on those Dassault users.
#Amd radeon pro software
Also attending were a lot of AMD software and hardware partners. This event had a particularly exciting vibe for me as it was packed with genuine end-users of the full Dassault portfolio including CATIA, SOLIDWORKS, SIMULIA, ENOVIA and DELMIA.
#Amd radeon pro pro
A Mac Pro with two Radeon Pro W6800X Duo MPX Modules starts out at $15,599-each W6800X Duo racking up $5,000.A couple of weeks ago I had the pleasure of attending the Dassault COE (Community of Experts) 2018 Annual Experience and TechniFair in San Diego. If those rumours are true, let's hope AMD is a little more generous when it comes to pricing than Apple. AMD is rumoured to be producing a graphics card with chiplets, one that might just blur the lines of what constitutes a single GPU. Yet that's not to say we won't see something similar in our gaming PCs. It might be a monster for making games, at least. In short, this Radeon Pro Duo isn't going to suddenly make the Mac Pro a gaming monster.
#Amd radeon pro drivers
Where once drivers were built to satisfy the needs of users running either dual-graphics card or dual-GPU systems, that's not often the case today. Sadly, the days of dual-GPU gaming graphics cards have passed. It's the bandwidth on offer with that connection that offers high performance between the two GPUs and will save time when running compute-heavy tasks. Each W6800X Duo includes an Infinity Fabric connection that straddles its two GPUs-one and the same with the interconnect used to bridge chiplets within AMD Ryzen Zen 2 and newer processors. The benefit of such a setup is not only raw compute power, but also more bandwidth to match. Best CPU for gaming: the top chips from Intel and AMDīest graphics card: your perfect pixel-pusher awaitsīest SSD for gaming: get into the game ahead of the rest