What are typical scores for benchmark in Contextcapture for different GPU cards? Does GPU RAM size influence much?
Benchmark scores can be checked in Contextcapture Settings->Configuration->Start Benchmark
My compiled list:
Also there seems there is no linear correlation with benchmark scores regarding processing time. For example on same machine GTX 650 Ti processes sample model 5 hours while GTX 980 Ti processes it at 3 hours while benchmark scores differ 7 times performance is only 2 times. General Contextcapture System Requirements:Minimum HardwareIt requires at least 8 GB of RAM and NVIDIA or AMD graphics card, or Intel-integrated graphics processor compatible with OpenGL 3.2 with at least 1 GB of dedicated memory.
For specific Annotation jobs leveraging artificial intelligence, minimum GPU requirement are higher. A 4.0GB NVIDIA device with up-to-date drivers is the minimum.
Recommended HardwareAs of January 2020, the following configuration is recommended: a recent desktop computer running under Microsoft Windows 8/10 64-bit with 64 GB of RAM, an 8+core i9-CPU and an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti graphics card. Input, working and output data should preferably be stored on fast storage devices (fast HDD, SSD, SAN). For file sharing, we recommend a >1-Gigabit Ethernet network.
Please post your scores!
Oto said:Quadro Pxxx-?
P5200 - 162 on i7-8850H laptop.
It is. A little bit better now with newer drivers.
Only problem, now HP Z Books using thermal throttling instead of active cooling, and the whole setup is really unproductive... DON"T BUY HP's z Books for heavy productions!!, I had to switch the Z8 tower, at least I can hear when fans kick in on it and it runs full speed all the time!)) Some apps on the laptop could turn fans on, but ContextCapture, ReCap and etc. can't.., it goes down to a half of the base frequency and to about a 60% CPU load at about 90 degrees C, and fans stay quiet... what a waste of $5k..
HP replaced mother board 5 times, with a new fans on the last one, and still no change... It's obviously a software glitch, or a purposely degraded performance, so people buy newer models.