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Thu 22 Aug

Jensen Huang Signed NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080 Graphics Card Businessman and electrical engineer (born 1963) known as the co-founder, president, and CEO of NVIDIA, a leading manufacturer of graphics processing units (GPUs). Highly desirable NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080 graphics card sealed in its original box, measuring 15.5″ x 7.5″ x 8″, signed on the box in gold ink by the company's co-founder and CEO, "Welcome to OpenUSD and Omniverse! Jensen Huang, March 19, 2024, GTC 2024." The label identifies the unit as Part No. 900-1G136-2560-000, Serial No. 1324122039761. In fine condition. According to the consignor, this signed NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4080 GPU was given away at the GTC Conference on March 19, 2024. From NVIDIA: "Boasting our 3rd generation RTX architecture, the GeForce RTX 4080 is beyond fast, delivering exceptional experiences in rasterized, ray-traced and AI-powered games and apps. With its many technological enhancements, the GeForce RTX 4080 is twice as fast as the GeForce RTX 3080 Ti, and even faster still in fully ray-traced games...The GeForce RTX 4080 includes all the same advancements, enhancements, and innovations as the GeForce RTX 4090, meaning you can multiply frame rates with NVIDIA DLSS 3, encode video up to 2X faster with dual 8th gen NVIDIA Encoders, stream with 40% better efficiency using AV1, and chew through creative workloads in half the time, helping you get more done, faster." In 2023, NVIDIA became the seventh public U.S. company to be valued at over $1 trillion, and, as of June 2024, it was the world's second most-valuable publicly traded company after Microsoft.

Estim. 3 000 - 5 000 USD

Thu 22 Aug

Video Action II 'Home Version' Gaming Console with Original Box (Universal Research Laboratories) Exceedingly rare original ‘home version’ of the Video Action (Model VA-II) gaming console released by Universal Research Laboratories in 1974-1975. The heavy console, 24″ x 4″ x 14″, features a large game control base with four paddle controls and a central paddle display button. The front panel of the lower base features a knob for “Game Volume,” an on/off “Game Switch,” a ‘Game On’ indicator light, and a speaker vent, and the back panel contains a “Slo-Blow Fuse,” power cord, control cable receptacle, and a TV receptacle. Includes its original cardboard “Video Action” box by Universal Research Laboratories, which features various wear and stains. The console is in fine, untested condition. Accompanied by a printed copy of the Video Action II user manual. The Video Action (Model VA-II) was an early home gaming console released by Universal Research Laboratories (URL) in the summer of 1974 as part of the early wave of Pong-style games. The console included three built-in games - Hockey, Soccer, and Tennis - and early models of the VA-II were sold with a 12-inch Broadmoor television for $499, targeting bars and waiting rooms; another version, sans the TV, was offered the next year for $299. The VA-II was well-made but overly expensive, relying on the fact that it was the lone alternative to the Magnavox Odyssey. In 1975, at least five other consumer-grade PONG-style consoles were released in North America, including the Television Tennis by Executive Games, the FD3000 by First Dimension, both the Magnavox Odyssey 100 and 200, and the Tele-Games PONG (the Sears-branded version of the Atari PONG). URL released Video Action III and the INDY 500 in 1976, and then filed for bankruptcy the following year.

Estim. 3 000 - 5 000 USD