NVIDIA QuadroĪs covered above, NVIDIA’s slapped a $500 SRP on its Quadro M2000, although as always, street price is expected to be lower. Even if you go lower than 4K, the card’s display limit remains 4 (perhaps not a big surprise given the four outputs). The M2000 might sport a modest aesthetic, but it still has what it takes to drive high resolution displays, which includes up to 4x 4K/60Hz, or single 5K/60Hz.
Those who need DVI should be able to find an appropriate adapter in the box (it’s important to check before purchase). To help modernize the M2000 a bit, NVIDIA has chosen to offer 4x DisplayPort connections in lieu of a combination of DP and DVI. I took an in-depth look at Iray and its plugins in December. As with the other Maxwell-based Quadros, the M2000 fully supports NVIDIA’s Iray renderer, which is available to a number of design suites as a plugin. NVIDIA notes that this latest card has what it takes to deliver great experiences in SolidWorks, Siemens NX, and PTC Creo. M2000’s target customers include those working with CAD or lighter 3D projects. 1.3 TF), and improves memory throughput by about 30%.
Compared to the outgoing K2200, the M2000 has 20% more cores, delivers up to 1.8 TFLOPs of processing power (vs.