The latest release of the CUDA Toolkit, version 12.8, continues to push accelerated computing performance in data sciences, AI, scientific computing, and computer graphics and simulation, using the latest NVIDIA CPUs and GPUs. This post highlights some of the new features and enhancements included with this release: CUDA Toolkit 12.8 is the first version of the Toolkit to support…
]]>The release supports GB100 capabilities and new library enhancements to cuBLAS, cuFFT, cuSOLVER, cuSPARSE, as well as the release of Nsight Compute 2024.3.
]]>With the R515 driver, NVIDIA released a set of Linux GPU kernel modules in May 2022 as open source with dual GPL and MIT licensing. The initial release targeted datacenter compute GPUs, with GeForce and Workstation GPUs in an alpha state. At the time, we announced that more robust and fully-featured GeForce and Workstation Linux support would follow in subsequent releases and the NVIDIA Open…
]]>The latest release of CUDA Toolkit, version 12.4, continues to push accelerated computing performance using the latest NVIDIA GPUs. This post explains the new features and enhancements included in this release: CUDA and the CUDA Toolkit software provide the foundation for all NVIDIA GPU-accelerated computing applications in data science and analytics, machine learning…
]]>The latest release of CUDA Toolkit continues to push the envelope of accelerated computing performance using the latest NVIDIA GPUs. New features of this release, version 12.3, include: CUDA and the CUDA Toolkit continue to provide the foundation for all accelerated computing applications in data science, machine learning and deep learning, generative AI with LLMs for both training and…
]]>The latest release of CUDA Toolkit 12.2 introduces a range of essential new features, modifications to the programming model, and enhanced support for hardware capabilities accelerating CUDA applications. Now out through general availability from NVIDIA, CUDA Toolkit 12.2 includes many new capabilities, both major and minor. The following post offers an overview of many of the key…
]]>NVIDIA announces the newest CUDA Toolkit software release, 12.0. This release is the first major release in many years and it focuses on new programming models and CUDA application acceleration through new hardware capabilities. For more information, watch the YouTube Premiere webinar, CUDA 12.0: New Features and Beyond. You can now target architecture-specific features and instructions…
]]>NVIDIA announces the newest CUDA Toolkit software release, 11.8. This release is focused on enhancing the programming model and CUDA application speedup through new hardware capabilities. New architecture-specific features in NVIDIA Hopper and Ada Lovelace are initially being exposed through libraries and framework enhancements. The full programming model enhancements for the NVIDIA Hopper…
]]>To best ensure the security and reliability of our RPM and Debian package repositories, NVIDIA is updating and rotating the signing keys used by the , , and package managers beginning April 27, 2022. If you don’t update your repository signing keys, expect package management errors when attempting to access or install packages from CUDA repositories. To ensure continued access to the…
]]>NVIDIA announces the newest release of the CUDA development environment, CUDA 11.6. This release is focused on enhancing the programming model and performance of your CUDA applications. CUDA continues to push the boundaries of GPU acceleration and lay the foundation for new applications in HPC, visualization, AI, ML and DL, and data science. CUDA 11.6 has several important features.
]]>NVIDIA announces the newest release of the CUDA development environment, CUDA 11.5. CUDA 11.5 is focused on enhancing the programming model and performance of your CUDA applications. CUDA continues to push the boundaries of GPU acceleration and lay the foundation for new applications in HPC, visualization, AI, ML and DL, and data sciences. CUDA 11.5 has several important features.
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