Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Can You Put a GPU on a MOTHERBOARD?”.
There’S nothing like unboxing, a shiny, new graphics card, but they’re just so bulky. Why is it that we can’t just buy the GPU by itself and Slot it directly onto our motherboard, like we do for CPUs? It turns out. There are a lot of reasons that it’s just not that simple and a big one is power. You see a mid to high end. Discrete GPU draws lots of power to the point where it’s typically the single most power hungry component in your system, and you can see this if you look at a graphics card with the cooler removed. Many of those little components that you see all over the board are dedicated to power delivery and voltage regulation, which is part of the reason that graphics cards tend to be quite large.
Putting these components onto the motherboard would not only make it larger, but also significantly more expensive, but that’s far from the only logistical concern. Another big one is memory you see, although integrated Graphics can share your system’s standard, DDR RAM and some lower end discrete gpus actually use dedicated, but still run-of-the-mill, DDR mid and higher range options. Use special video RAM, called gddr, with the G being for graphics.
Gddr is higher bandwidth because it’s designed to handle large chunks of data such as the visual assets and textures, that your GPU is continually asking for. By contrast, normal DDR is better at handling smaller pieces of data, so it doesn’t have as much bandwidth but its latency is lower. This means that if you were to put a relatively powerful GPU directly onto a motherboard, you would also need to build in dedicated gddr memory, which would you guessed it make the motherboard even bigger and even more expensive. Now, hypothetically, you could design this video memory or vram to be slotted in rather than slaughtered directly to the graphics card.
But this actually has the possibility of increasing the rate of data errors, which is a big part of the reason that all modern graphics cards use. Soldered on vram, even if you could solve the memory and power issues, though there’s another big roadblock that we’ll tell you about right after we think brilliant for sponsoring this video brilliant is a website, an app that’s built around Active Learning and it’s both accessible and fun. With brilliant, you can trade away, boring long lectures for problem solving and interactive visuals they’ve got over 60 courses to choose from including their new everyday math course, which gives you a refresher on foundational math topics that you might have not touched since high school.
So don’t wait, join the community of 10 million Learners and Educators today, with the first 200 of you who go to brilliant.org techwiki getting 20 off in annual your subscription. Another huge hurdle to having a GPU socket on your motherboard is the socket itself. You know how AMD and Intel CPUs use completely different, socket designs and even within AMD or within Intel.
You end up having to upgrade your motherboard ever so often when they decide to change the pin layout. Well, you would have the same problem with a GPU socket, but arguably worse, as there are now three discreet GPU manufacturers with Intel entering The Fray and GPU architectures tend to be updated more frequently and more dramatically than on the CPU side, meaning that motherboards would go Out of date, much more quickly, not to mention that you’d be locked into one CPU vendor and one GPU vendor every time you bought a new one. None of this even mentions that all those different gpus would necessitate different amounts of power, delivery and vram, so you’d either have the problem where you’d need a stupidly, huge lineup of different motherboards from every manufacturer to accommodate all these different variations or you’d have to over Engineer every motherboard with enough power and memory to support the entire GPU product stack, which might put you in a position where you’d have to consider selling organs for a motherboard. Finally, there’s the reality that, although graphics cards are hot Commodities with Gamers there, there are many more people out there that don’t need a powerful GPU, meaning that motherboards with GPU sockets on them would be relegated to a very niche market.
Due to how expensive they’d be giving manufacturers even less of an incentive to make them so for the time being, if you want a GPU on your motherboard, it’s probably only going to happen in a laptop or other specialized device on the desktop. It’S just so much cheaper and easier for them to continue doing what they’ve been doing, slotting them into universally compatible, inexpensive, PCI Express slots, and besides do you really want to strap another cooler to your motherboard? What you really want to do is subscribe. Yes, the video is over bye-bye .