Nvidia Quadro K5000 – the new card in town for HDX 3D and HDX 3D Pro

Written by Thomas Poppelgaard. Posted in 3DConnexion, Autodesk, Dell, HDX 3D, HDX 3D Pro, HP, IBM, Microsoft, XenApp, XenDesktop

Hi all, i am so excited to share this news with you.

I love that Citrix released in Citrix XenDesktop 5.6 FP1 a new version of HDX 3D Pro, which reduced the bandwidth consumption and increased framerate, this is a huge improvement of the technology that i adore. A lot is happening in this space and soon we will see the new Nvidia VGX card that will be able to virtualize the GPU and have multiple users on 1 GPU. NVIDIA says they will be able to have 100 users using this card. For HDX 3D Pro i would cut that down to 10-20, why cause users that normal works with a card like the Quadro 4000 are using the 256 CUDA cores for 3D rich applications like Autodesk Inventor, Dassault Catia/Solidworks, ProE + more. Again time will tell when Nvidia VGX Model 1 is released and if i know NVIDIA right, they will ship cards with more powerful GPU chips on the VGX in the future.

Nvidia have released a Quadro graphic card thats based on the new Kepler technology.
The card is called Quadro K5000.

  • This card is 1/3 the price of the Quadro 6000 and look at the numbers it delivers in the chart i have created.
  • The CUDA cores it delivers are so impressive 3x more than Quadro 6000.
  • The Power consumption is 45% less than the most powerful Quadro card.

** update 22 February 2013

If you want to use the Nvidia Quadro K5000 with GPU pass-through the card is now supported from NVIDIA.

GPU pass-through is supported with Citrix XenServer 6.x and VmWare vSphere 5.1
Above is information confirmed from NVIDIA.

Look out for the Nvidia VGX K2 thats will be sold in Q1 2013. This card is 2x K5000 on 1 card and works with GPU pass-through.

 

Quadro K5000
Quadro 4000
Quadro 5000
Quadro 6000
VGX Model 1
CUDA Cores1
1536
256
352
448
768
Single Precision Compute Performance
2.1 Teraflops
0,4 Teraflops
0,7 Teraflops
1,0 Teraflops
GPU Memory Specs
Memory Size Total
4 GB GDDR5
2 GB GDDR5
2.5 GB GDDR5
6 GB GDDR5
16 GB GDDR3
Memory Interface
256-bit
256-bit
320-bit
384-bit
?
Memory Bandwidth (GB/sec)
173 GB/s
89.6 GB/s
120 GB/s
144 GB/s
115 GB/s
Power Specs
Max Power
122 W
142 W
152 W
204 W
150 W
FormFactor
Dual Slot
Single Slot
Dual Slot
Dual Slot
Dual Slot

Source

Read more about the NVIDIA Quadro K5000 graphic card

 

Autodesk Cloud Computing is Here

Written by Thomas Poppelgaard. Posted in Autodesk, Citrix, XenApp

Autodesk is out with Cloud Computing

John Evans have wroten a great article that explains what AutoDesk Cloud Computing is and what it means and what it offers.. here we go

Autodesk has just announced their first official full cloud initiative, including two cloud computing features. They call it Autodesk Cloud. Included in this feature set are:

  • Cloud Document Storage
  • Cloud based and mobile DWF viewing
  • Mobile AutoCAD WS
  • Multi-user real time editing of dwg files
  • Buzzsaw
  • Revit Conceptual Energy Analysis
  • Green Building Studio
  • Cloud Rendering
  • Inventor Optimization

What I want to talk about is the cloud computing options, but first a few points on the rest of the collection

Industry Breakdown and Subscription

Autodesk CloudUnfortunately, these features are not completely available to everyone. Firstly, some features (the cool stuff) are a subscription only package, and only available to those who are on an existing Autodesk subscription license. Secondly, availability depends on which license you possess. If you are a Revit user, you can have just about anything you like, but the rest of us have some limitations.

AEC gets the lion’s share of this mid-cycle release. The products are broken down by software, and therefore which suite you subscribe to. Oddly enough, Infrastructure Design Suite did not get included. Here’s a summary.

    • Autodesk Design Suite (Premium and Ultimate) – Cloud Rendering
    • Autodesk Factory design Suite (all) – Green Building Studio
    • Autodesk Product Design Suite (Premium or Ultimate) – Inventor Optimization
    • Autodesk Building Design Suite (Premium and Ultimate) – Green Building Studio, Cloud Rendering, and Revit Conceptual Energy Analysis, (Education) – Revit Energy Analysis, (Standard) – Green Building Studio
    • AutoCAD Architecture – Green Building Studio
    • Autodesk Revit Architecture & Suite – Green Building Studio and Revit Conceptual Energy Analysis
    • Autodesk Revit MEP & Suite – Green Building Studio and Revit Conceptual Energy Analysis
    • AutoCAD MEP – Green Building Studio
    • Autodesk Ecotect Analysis – Green Building Studio
    • T1 Enterprise Multi-Flex – Green Building Studio and Revit Conceptual Energy Analysis
    • Autodesk Design Academy – Green Building Studio and Revit Conceptual Energy Analysis
    • Autodesk Education Master Suite – Green Building Studio and Revit Conceptual Energy Analysis
    • Autodesk Infrastructure Design Suite FOR EDUCATION – Green Building Studio and Revit Conceptual Energy Analysis
    • Autodesk Vault Collaboration AEC – Buzzsaw That’s it in a nutshell. If you are a Civil 3D user, well……at least you get Autodesk Cloud Documents.

Revit Conceptual Energy is built into Revit 2012, and is available through the “Analyze Mass Model” button. Users of previous versions can download Revit Conceptual Energy at the Autodesk Subscription Center:

www.autodesk.com/subscriptionlogin

    Cloud Documents for all Comers

You can view, share, and edit your files with the cloud DWF viewing/editing, PDF and AutoCAD WS capabilities. Autodesk is extending the cloud and 1 gig of storage as well, to all users with an Autodesk account. (That’s the thing you signed up for with AutoCAD WS and Publisher Mobile). Users on product subscriptions receive 3 Gigs of storage space to store their design files on. Another added benefit is the luxury of not having to install software, which was a past deterrent for may to adopt the DWF format. Now that it is all cloud based, anyone, including the non-design types, can view and edit DWF files with an internet connection.

More information will be forthcoming as well as the official website.

http://documents.cloud.autodesk.com

Inventor Cloud Optimization

Autodesk Inventor Optimization

    They’re back, but with a few more twists. First Inventor Suite subscribers will get a new Optimization button on their ribbon’s Environments Panel. This will kick off my beloved Optimization tool, allowing you to use Autodesk’s servers to perform your stress analysis calculations.
    There is however a catch: You will receive 100 ‘Cloud Units’ per year. Each time you post a new Optimization package to their server, you get an unknown quantity of these units deducted from your available allotment. These are calculated based on just how much processing you use, the algorithm for which is still not disclosed by Autodesk. When they are gone, who knows. Perhaps once the fan-fare is over, we can find out.

Cloud Rendering for Revit

Autodesk Revit Cloud RenderingRendering, while limited to those Revit people, has some really slick features. I was kind of impressed, almost to the point of being jealous. (I said almost). The service stores you model on the server, and lets you view the results online. Furthermore, you can then select different settings such as increased quality of render, and have the server re-run the render from anywhere in the world.

The application can also render a full 360° panorama.

    All you Cloud Rendering people out there are still giggling about the Inventor Cloud Optimization ‘cloud units’. Yeah, well don’t laugh. You got the same cloud unit allotment. :-p

Autodesk Revit Cloud RenderingThe rendering plug-in for Autodesk Revit is available for download after logging in at:

http://rendering.cloud.autodesk.com Cloud rendering is not available to the hardcore rendering tools. What? That’s right, Revit and AutoCAD Architectural types only ! Showcase and 3DS Max peeps, maybe next time.Autodesk works with multiple partners, including Amazon and Citrix, to provide a scalable cloud computing infrastructure to meet customer needs. Autodesk has been working with Amazon Web Services for more than three years in order to securely host high-demand, scalable applications such as Autodesk Homestyler software and Autodesk Seek web service.

      Amazon Web Services provides Autodesk with the flexibility to scale computing around the world with Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) and resilient storage capacity with Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) and Elastic Block Store (EBS), as well as the ability to more efficiently deliver applications and content to customers. Autodesk also teams with Citrix to provide customers with greater efficiency in their use of Autodesk applications. Delivering solutions to end users with Citrix XenApp can help customers reduce workstation costs while still providing the software performance they need

Recent Comments

Dan

|

Hi Thomas,
Some features in your screenshots (eg create appointments and contacts) seem to be missing from the iOS version of @WorkMail that got released in April, do you know if these features are still coming in a future release? The Android client is far more functional by comparison.
Regards
Dan

Christian Eilskov

|

You can see the DHCP options here:

http://www.wyse.com/kb and search for 21501

You can transfer a image using Wyse Device Manager(WDM), the same goes for smaller updates like new ICA client and so.

Thomas Poppelgaard

|

Thank you Barry =)
The deep compression codec for Citrix XenDesktop HDX 3D Pro will be intergrated for Citrix XenApp in Excalibur so there is a big difference with bandwidth consumption. This means that XenApp in Excalibur will be the best platform for user density and works great over WAN with high latency as HDX 3D Pro have been known to deliver for several years. Yes i know of cases with WAN optimization, I will gather these and share them.

Best regards
Thomas

Barry Schiffer

|

Hi Thomas,

Nice work! Awesome to see these results on XenApp! Is there any noticable difference between XA 6.5 and Excalibur that you are aware of? Do you have experience with WAN Optimization and how this helps to reduce bandwidth further?

Kind regards,

Barry

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