Last week, Neatlab published the video 6 Neat as the latest version of their video engine to reduce noise and improve video quality that can be used with Davinci Resolve, Final Cut and Premiere Pro software. The Pure 6 video offers a faster rendering engine, optimized CPU + GPU performance, improved memory management and other improvements. The neat video 6 continues to take care of Linux natively with regard to Davinci Resolve uses as well as various hosts ofx like Natron / Flame / Mistika / Fusion Studio / Nuke. As they also updated their Neatbench reference, I was curious to see how the performance of video 6 is for new NVIDIA GeForce RTX 50 Blackwell GPU.
Although the neat video is an engine to denoisize owner and commercial video, it continues to take care of Linux natively. In addition, their bench Neat works well for the comparative analysis of this workload on CPUs and GPUs. As I had recently released a bunch of Gpus Nvidia GeForce for Nvidia Maxwell tests in BlackwellWith the release of these cards, then by learning the neat version 6 / Neatbench 6, I decided to take these GPUs for a turn with the updated software.
The graphics cards tested with Neatbench 6 included:
– GTX 980 Ti
– GTX 1080
– GTX Titan X
– RTX 2080
– RTX 2080 Super
– RTX 2080 Ti
– Titan RTX
– RTX 3080
– RTX 3090
– RTX 4080
– RTX 4080 Super
– RTX 4090
– RTX 5080
– RTX 5090
The GTX 900/1000 series used the NVIDIA 550.144.03 driver while the RTX 2000 and more recent series on the NVIDIA 570.86.16 driver. All tests were under Ubuntu 24.10 on the Linux nucleus 6.11.