The PC and tech world has been in the throes of the Nvidia RTX 3000 series for the best part of a year, although it's been difficult to get hold of any of it due to the ongoing shortages. With rumors that Nvidia is preparing for its 4000 series, many will be speculating about what this next generation will involve, and a recent leak is predicting what, at the very least, one of the company's products will be like in terms of its hardware spec.

In a recent post on Twitter, user and leaker Greymon55 has been discussing their speculations on a couple of AMD and Nvidia products, and what they believe the specifications will be. Most notably, they reveal that Nvidia's upcoming RTX 4090 card will feature, among other things, 24 GB of GDDR6X VRAM and 18,432 CUDA cores. The user also says that AMD's next generation will have 7,680 cores and come with a possible 32 GB of RAM.

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The RTX 4090 will understandably be a jumping off point from Nvidia's RTX 3090 GPU, which was released last September, and also contains 24 GB of RAM, but has less CUDA cores at 10,496. Of course, these are only rumors at this stage. However reliable the information may be, and other sources have been citing Greymon55's tweets, "team green" has not yet made any official announcements about the next generation of graphics cards, or what their specifications will be.

Nvidia is also currently gearing up for more in its 3000 series, with an upcoming laptop version of its RTX 3070 Ti product due out sometime next year. However, the tech world is currently in dire straits as shortages of supplies means that companies like Nvidia and AMD are struggling to get hardware into the hands of consumers. The deficit is expected to last until possibly 2023, according to industry experts. Having said that, the fact that products are still being made, and the next generation of GPUs is currently being talked about, suggests it isn't dampening the ambition of the big companies.

Team green also experienced another set back recently, when a truckload of RTX 3000 cards were stolen in a daring heist. It's not looking great for PC gamers and enthusiasts who have been waiting for the better part of a year for the deficit to be fixed. It's entirely possible that things could start to look a bit brighter some time next year, but Nvidia is seemingly not letting any bad news stop it from leaping forward into the 4000 series.

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Source: WCCF Tech