A motherboard compatible with eight GPUs
A motherboard compatible with eight GPUs
Yes, an 8 NVIDIA Quadro can be used effectively. The main idea is to understand the purpose behind having multiple GPUs on a single motherboard. There are two approaches to this: one focuses on performance and flexibility, while the other considers cost and compatibility.
Your question is unclear. Could you clarify what you mean by "8 quadros and game on 32K"?
As previously mentioned, there is no driver support available, SLI functionality is unavailable, and it's not possible to find a monitor compatible with that display size.
They don't back combined resolution or SLI/CF to that extent. If you can multiply three-digit numbers easily, having eight of you wouldn't double the speed to twenty-four digits instantly—just faster than working alone, but not an eightfold improvement.
Sure, you can combine 16 8K monitors into one system. Did you see the Linus 16K video? He used 16 4K GPUs and 4 4K GPUs. Can you achieve a similar setup with 8 4K Quad displays and 16 8K monitors?
I'm attempting to summarize previous discussions about SLI and multi-GPU support in gaming. Currently, gaming doesn't allow simultaneous use of multiple graphics cards, especially not two at a time. Workstation-grade cards like Quadros are intended for rendering, modeling, and machine learning—not for games. Most modern systems focus on mining, machine learning, or rendering tasks instead. Gaming remains largely excluded from SLI configurations, with Nvidia phasing it out from their gaming lineup. The only 30-series card supporting SLI/NVLink is the 3090, which is primarily built for workstation use rather than gaming.