In fact, one of the big things holding me pack from purchasing the Surface Book 3 with RTX is my concern that this GPU consumes considerably more power than the GTX alternative, and my experience so far has been that intermittent fan-based cooling on laptops is not good for speech recognition. Which may not be too bad - I have been considering replacing my mortally wounded Microsoft Surface Book to with the Surface Book 3 that has an RTX Quadro. No license constraints that I can see, but I would not be at all surprised to find out that some future release of the software refuses to run on my GTX laptop. I followed the link from Ars Technica above and successfully installed the RTX noise filtering software on my laptop which has a GTX.
Memory: 16GB Microphone Brand and Model: LFH 4000 & Flexy Mike Operating System: win 10, latest update Surface Book 2, Processor (CPU) Type & Speed: I7 8650 Soundcard Brand and Model: none Speech Software: Dragon Medical Practice Edition, french version: 4.2 Using KnowBrainer?:Yes If you were able to integrate the benefits without the latency (maybe having an RTX card would reduce it, but given the price of thos cards it's a costly bet), it would be a very good step with the price to pay of an added latency. I'm trying to work with it with RTX voice enabled, with no RTX card and it adds a marginal benefit. I became very clear it's what gave me the best result of all I tried, in my context (home office, voice around, and prof office with a little echo because i'm alone in a gib room). I recently took out my tablemike 6 in 1 from my microphone museum, since I did not try it again since I'm working with DMPE 4.
This is why we are currently exploring the possibility of integrating such a functionality in our Octopus USB Controller application and/or our TableMike and TravelMike microphones. Nvidia RTX Voice Software Noise Cancelling - OMG