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Nvidia highlights collaboration with major Indian OEMs and PC builders, showcases AI and gaming with the RTX 5050 and other Blackwell GPUs at “Future of AI” event
Nvidia’s RTX 50 Blackwell lineup is now complete with the introduction of the GeForce RTX 5050 Laptop and RTX 5050 desktop GPUs. Recently, the company held a “Future of AI” event in New Delhi, India to heralding the arrival of these and other RTX 50 series GPUs in the country.
As a quick recap, the $249 MSRP RTX 5050 is pegged as the successor to the RTX 3050 and is based on the GB207 GPU with 2,560 CUDA cores, 80 tensor cores, and 20 ray tracing (RT) cores. It offers a 128-bit 8 GB GDDR6 VRAM and is rated at a 130 W TGP. The laptop version of this GPU offers largely similar specifications, except that it uses 128-bit 8 GB GDDR7 VRAM and has its TGP constrained to 50 W.
Nvidia’s Jeff Yen, Director of Technical Marketing, APAC, and John Gillooly, Senior Technical Marketing Manager, APAC South, dwelt on the technical aspects of the Blackwell architecture and how the RTX 50 GPUs right from the entry-level RTX 5050 to the flagship RTX 5090 behemoth benefit from DLSS 4, multi-frame generation, RTX Neural Shaders, and Reflex 2 technologies.
Apart from a host of pre-built desktops from Ant PC, The MVP, EliteHubs, and Vishal Peripherals, we were also shown new laptop designs that were recently launched in the Indian market including:
We have previously tested some of these configurations and hope to review the others and more soon.
Nvidia also had some cool demos on display, particularly with AI and ML workflows. The company demonstrated utilities such as ChatRTX, AnythingLLM, and AI Workbench accelerated by Tensor cores in the RTX Blackwell GPUs.
Buy the MSI Gaming GeForce RTX 5070 Ti 16G Ventus 3X OC on Amazon
Though a cell and molecular biologist by training, I have been drawn towards computers from a very young age ever since I got my first PC in 1998. My passion for technology grew quite exponentially with the times, and it has been an incredible experience from being a much solicited source for tech advice and troubleshooting among family and friends to joining Notebookcheck in 2017 as a professional tech journalist. Now, I am a Lead Editor at Notebookcheck covering news and reviews encompassing a wide gamut of the technology landscape for Indian and global audiences. When I am not hunting for the next big story or taking complex measurements for reviews, you can find me unwinding to a nice read, listening to some soulful music, or trying out a new game.
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