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NVIDIA rolls out DLSS 4.5 to all RTX GPUs

Engadget

Apple's Siri AI will be powered by Gemini An upgraded frame-generation feature is coming this spring. Just a week after announcing the latest version of its image-upscaling tech at CES, NVIDIA is rolling out DLSS 4.5. The company released a beta version of the update last week. Starting today, all NVIDIA app users with a GeForce RTX GPU will be able to upgrade to the full release of DLSS 4.5. NVIDIA says DLSS 4.5 Super Resolution (to give its full name) delivers sharper visuals and improved temporal stability.


Why supercomputers are the unsung heroes of PC gaming

PCWorld

It's funny how things in reality can be so far removed from what we imagined. A classic example of this is how I imagined there to be a horde of scientists at Nvidia HQ hunched over their PCs and all working to train the next generation of Nvidia DLSS algorithms -- between enjoying bouts of Call of Duty with colleagues, of course. But as it turns out that's only part of the story… Yes, there are scientists at Nvidia working on these projects, but doing a large portion of the work in training and developing new DLSS technology for us PC gamers to enjoy is also an AI supercomputer, and it's been doing that non-stop 24/7 for going on six years now. That nugget of information was delivered by Brian Catanzaro, Nvidia's VP of applied deep learning research at CES 2025 in Las Vegas. Catanzaro dropped that gem on stage casually as a throwaway comment while discussing details about DLSS 4. But as it turns out, that reference has been the catalyst for a ton of talk about the topic.


New to Generative AI? Here's How NVIDIA's GeForce RTX 50 Series GPUs Help You Explore the Latest Cool Tech

PCWorld

We're in the middle of an AI revolution, and while the new technology's benefits are clear, figuring out where to get started can be confusing. You're faced with buzzwords and lingo, and a nonstop stream of AI-related news makes it difficult to resolve how AI applies to you. But here's the good news: GeForce's RTX 50 Series GPUs serve as a great hardware platform to explore generative AI right on your own PC. From running large language models to playing AI-enhanced games, RTX 50 GPUs make generative AI more accessible than ever before. Follow along as we explain Generative AI, show you how it's being used to transform science, and then help you get started with AI on your GeForce RTX 50 Series powered PC.


AMD Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT review: The new 1440p gaming champions

PCWorld

Some software bugs mar the experience but overall, AMD's 9070 graphics cards offer such a compelling mix of performance, value, and memory capacity that it's worth accepting those quibbles. Nvidia fumbled the ball with its 549 GeForce RTX 5070, and AMD's new Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT are primed to seize advantage. The RTX 5070, hitting store shelves today, is a good 1440p graphics card but a stagnant generational sidegrade at best. Enter the 549 Radeon RX 9070 and 599 Radeon RX 9070 XT, launching tomorrow. Both cards are faster than the RTX 5070, with the 9070 XT going toe-to-toe with the 750 RTX 5070 Ti in many games, and each includes an ample 16GB of VRAM.


AMD's Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT target '4K gaming at a 1440p price'

PCWorld

The long wait is over. After kinda-sorta-teasing the Radeon RX 9070 and 9070 XT at CES 2025, AMD is finally pulling back the curtain on its next-generation graphics cards today, ahead of a March 6 launch date. AMD shuffled Radeon's branding this generation to mirror Nvidia's; the Radeon 599 RX 9070 XT will thus compete with the 749 RTX 5070 Ti, while the Radeon 549 RX 9070 takes aim at the 549 RTX 5070. Let's start with an overview of the improvements found in AMD's new RDNA 4 graphics architecture, before moving onto details about the Radeon RX 9070 series specifically, and what's coming with FSR 4 and Hypr-RX. One thing revealed in AMD's CES teaser: The Radeon 9000-series is built from the ground up for an AI future.


NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5090 review: Pure AI excess for 2,000

Engadget

A 2,000 video card for consumers shouldn't exist. The GeForce RTX 5090, like the 1,599 RTX 4090 before it, is more a flex by NVIDIA than anything truly meaningful for most gamers. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang said as much when he revealed the GPU at CES 2025, assuming that it'll be for hardcore players who have 10,000 rigs. Personally, I don't know anyone who actually fits that bill, not unless you count parasocial relationships with streamers. But we all know why NVIDIA is hyping up the unattainable RTX 5090: It lets the company show off benchmarks that AMD can't touch, once again cementing itself as the supreme leader of the high-end video card market.


Nvidia GeForce RTX 5090 review: Brutally fast, but DLSS 4 is the game changer

PCWorld

Nvidia's GeForce RTX 5090 is the most brutally fast graphics card ever introduced, augmented by new DLSS 4 technology that feels like magic. But you pay dearly for it, and it feels like this GPU was designed more for AI researchers than PC gamers. The wait is finally over. The long-awaited GeForce RTX 5090 lands on store shelves in January -- and friends, the flagship graphics card for Nvidia's new "Blackwell" architecture is an absolute monster. It should be for 2,000, of course.


Nvidia's DLSS 4 is so much more than just 'fake frames'

PCWorld

This year at CES, Nvidia presented the next generation of its DLSS upscaling technology, which is trained with the help of artificial intelligence, alongside the new GeForce RTX 5090, 5080, and 5070 (Ti) graphics cards. The company touted its major advantages -- and now that RTX 5090 reviews are live, we can confirm that DLSS 4 indeed feels like black magic, supercharging frame rates and making games feel just as snappy as the beloved Doom 2016. That's because DLSS 4 now supports Multi Frame Generation (MFG), an AI-based multiple intermediate frame calculation that can artificially generate up to three images and insert them between two "real" frames, thus quadrupling the frame rate. Of course, this feature only works on new Blackwell-based RTX 50-series GPUs. But are the AI frames generated in this way a step forward or is it all hogwash?


NVIDIA announced DLSS 4 will come to all RTX GPUs

Engadget

At CES 2025, NVIDIA introduced DLSS 4, the latest version of its real-time image upscaling technology, and announced that it will come to all RTX GPUs. That includes the RTX 20 series that was discontinued back in 2020, but the older models aren't getting all its features. In the new GeForce RTX 50 series models, DLSS 4 will enable Multi Frame Generation. This feature will generate up to three additional frames for every traditionally rendered one, and it can help multiply frame rates by up to eight times more than traditional brute-force rendering. NVIDIA claims 4K 240 FPS fully ray-traced gaming will be possible thanks to Multiple Frame Generation when using its GeForce RTX 5090 graphics card, the new 1,999 flagship GPU arriving later this month.


NVIDIA, AMD and Intel aimed for maximum power at CES 2025

Engadget

There was no question that NVIDIA's RTX 5000 GPUs would be one of the biggest stories at CES 2025, and I figured Intel and AMD to arrive with some new hardware of their own. But I didn't expect that each of these companies would, in their own way, be putting the pedal to the metal when it comes to power for their chip designs. After all, we've spent the last few years covering AI PC CPUs that was targeting efficiency more than raw performance. While NVIDIA RTX 5000 GPUs seem to deliver the performance leap we expected over its 2022-era cards, AMD is also redefining what's possible for mobile workstations with its Ryzen AI Max chips, which combine powerful graphics with gobs of integrated memory. Intel isn't sitting still either -- it's finally moving Arrow Lake into the high-performance and gaming arena with its Core Ultra 200HX chips, which can reach up to 24 cores and 5.5GHz speeds.