> Clearly, this operation requires specialized soldering skills and access to appropriate high-end tools. [...] The technician also uploaded a leaked, modified firmware onto the GeForce RTX 4090 48GB. It is important to note that each graphics card possesses a unique GPU device ID, which contains all pertinent information. During the system initialization process, the firmware verifies whether the GPU device ID corresponds with the one embedded within the chip. Hacked firmware has been present for some time.
So, an interesting YouTube video, but the $142 is not the whole story here, both in terms of materials and way no in terms of wall clock time required
I appreciate that they did call out the total cost later in the article, along with re-mentioning the specialized tools and experience, but the headline here deserved extra "clickbait alert" call out
Cheer2171 · 2h ago
Anyone have experiences with the 2080 22gb mods?
metadat · 2h ago
Why only 2x the ram? Wouldn't 96GB be even more optimum?
Pretty awesome people went to the trouble to do this, casts some light on what is typically darkness on the consumer side of GPU product market segmentation.
Capitalism wins every time.
numpad0 · 4m ago
[delayed]
londons_explore · 2h ago
I assume because you need to have a stolen firmware image to load on.
Bet the ram size is a compile time constant and therefore you need to get hold of firmware from a card with the amount of ram you intend to add.
metadat · 1h ago
Is it possible to extract the firmware and instead modify the blob? Or is the NV firmware cryptographically encrypted to disable such methods of tampering?
adgjlsfhk1 · 1h ago
space. there's a limited number of spots on the board for VRAM chips and a maximum capacity at current tech levels.
So, an interesting YouTube video, but the $142 is not the whole story here, both in terms of materials and way no in terms of wall clock time required
I appreciate that they did call out the total cost later in the article, along with re-mentioning the specialized tools and experience, but the headline here deserved extra "clickbait alert" call out
Pretty awesome people went to the trouble to do this, casts some light on what is typically darkness on the consumer side of GPU product market segmentation.
Capitalism wins every time.
Bet the ram size is a compile time constant and therefore you need to get hold of firmware from a card with the amount of ram you intend to add.