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YesDo I smell MS waving the big stick here or are dev's too reluctant to move away from DX 'whatever'?
You could also make the case that developers are inherently lazy (or too eager to put profit above the gaming experience) - although the only proof for it would be the slew of games that are released with pervasive bug issues, insipid gameplay, lack of originality, the barest amount of effort when porting a game to PC from console, and shorter games with larger DLC add-ons.
Not sure how that tracks. Since GCN debuted the FP64 rate has been tied to the market the GPU was primarily aimed for. In 2012, Pitcairn and Cape Verde had 1/16 rate while the more compute minded Tahiti had 1/4. The second GCN iteration was similar - Oland and Bonaire both 1/16 with Hawaii 1/2 (still the GPU basis for AMD's compute cards). The third iteration made 1/16 standard across both Tonga and Fiji. It would be almost a certainty given AMD's "2.5X performance per watt" claim that Polaris will also feature a 1/16 FP64 rate.The number of FP32/FP64 units in this chip are likely better utilized than the previous generations of their GCN chips, which didn't change much since its release in 2012.
Seems highly unlikely but I like your optimism.I predict that the 470 will replace the 390X and that the 480 will replace FuryX performance wise.
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