Is good for long idle only. Doesn't help when you are in 3d applications or gaming. But again - 390x has no mention of power usage so any discussion of energy usage is speculation - which has been thrashed to death.
Well that's the usual of discussions regarding the 390X at all:
Person 1: Hey did you hear about the (Insert new rumor), sounds cool right and could be nice for the new 390X?
Person 2: Yea but the 290X uses electricity and was a bit hotter which is all that matters.
Person 1: But what does that have to do with the 390X, is that relevant?
Thus the conversation goes on to be an off topic discussion when that happens.
I like how everyone forgets about Zero Core...
Still saving power tho isn't it? NV has nothing even close. It doesn't take that long to kick in either.
Well Zero Core is for idle and kicks in making power usage very minimal which is very obvious and works. Nvidia does however have an equivalent which makes them all pretty much on par.
Keep cool, keep all the power....
Dude we get it your a fanboy and obviously do not care about the 390X so you can stop.
It depends on where in the USA you live and how many cards you're running but to answer your question in general. If your AMD card was using 150 watts more than the Nvidia equivalent card. The average cost in the US for a kWh is 12 cents. If you game for an average of 20 hours a week then your monthly electric bill is going to go up ~$1.56
So, not much.
Yep but some places have really high electricity especially some countries which have more than triple normal costs in the U.S. which could factor in so I can understand some of what said (Though at that point my argument is why get a high end card if your that concerned because obviously your money could be used better elsewhere).
Good thing the industry does. Lower power processing requirements are currently driving most new developments - everything is about power reduction as portability becomes more and more relevant. But this is irrelevant, this topic is rumour - as much as the Titan II one is on the news section of TPU. There's nothing in this OP that suggests anything about power draw - we don't know what architecture it is. This could be more efficient than Hawaii - we don't know.
Let's hope the 390x is a Maxwell killer - otherwise we're facing more hideous prices from Nvidia's top range.
I am with you on that, better efficiency also is great for the mobile market which could mean better laptop GPU's among other devices.