I'm not a huge fan of different variations of a card all being given the same model number, I definitely don't think that should be done. But comparing it to what AMD did with the RX 560 isn't a fair comparison. What AMD did is notably worse.
With the GT730, that was literally a bottom of the barrel card. AND they released all the versions of the card at the same exact time. So everyone knew they existed from day one, and you knew what to look for. If reviewers reviewed the card, they knew to look at the version and let people know which one they were reviewing. (Did any major site ever even review the GT730?) Plus, the target demographic wasn't gaming, if you tried to game on a GT730, I feel bad for you, every version of that card was shit.
But AMD released a model on the market, then later on released another weaker card under the same name. This is very different from what nVidia did, and worse. It also isn't the first time they've released a card, let it be reviewed, then reduced the performance. They've been pulling that shit since at least 2008...
I disagree and agree with your post.
First, I don't think that the money a consumer is paying for a GT 730 have less value than those payed from another for an RX 560, as the money payed for an RX 560 don't have less value for those payed for a GTX 1070 for example. I could also say that "Hey, RX 560 is not as good as a GTX 1070, so scr3w those poor people buying RX 560 for gaming". I am not trying to put words in your mouth here, just pointing to the fact that this "it's a low end card" excuse, in fact is NOT an excuse.
The GT 730 is not the bottom of the barrel. You can play games with that card, just at 720p and medium/low settings in most cases. The bottom of the barrel is the integrated graphics in Intel processors and many people who like to improve at least a little their gaming experience, or don't have money/don't wont to pay much for a graphics card, will go for these kind of cards. And when three people buy three GT 730 cards and end up with three totally different cards, that's not something I can excuse. The fact that they where released the same day means nothing really. You might know about these cards. I might know about these cards. Nvidia could have explained the three models in detail in it's press release(I doubt), but most people who will go at a shop to buy a GT 730, don't really know what they get. And reviews, no, haven't really seen any, at least not direct comparisons between the three different models. I would be putting benchmark charts here, not just the spec page, if there where any. It would have been much much more fun and much more obvious of what I am trying to say here.
I do agree that AMD creating a new lower performing model months AFTER the original was released is BAD. REALLY BAD. It reminds me why I am NOT buying Kingston SSDs(and microSD cards for their pathetic 4K writing speeds). But selling three totally different cards under the same name from day one and adding one worst version of a model latter, in 9 out of 10 cases is the same. Because 9 out of 10 consumers will never read reviews, 9 out of 10 consumers will buy the 4GB, DDR3 64bit version of the card, because the 64bit GDDR5 version comes only with 2GB memory, so it is half as fast. By the way. All DDR3 models of low end Nvidia cards come out almost always with 1800MHz DDR3 memory. Latter models usually come with much slower memory. The GT 620 I have (bought it at a really low price) was coming with DDR3 at 600MHz. I have even seen models with 533MHz DDR3. We are talking about the same memory bandwidth as a Geforce 210 with DDR3 memory.
Would you point to some examples with AMD doing the same in the past? Don't really remember any. Maybe you confuse it with models like the HD4830 and HD5830 or something.
Do you want an example where AMD did something bad? The transition from HD 7770, HD 7750 and HD 7730 to R5 240, R7 250 and R7 250X. It was a downgrade.
But... we're reading an AMD topic here. What's next, a full list of all weird releases of every company ever?
Also - you can see in your little screenshot a full spec list, including shader counts, memory bus etc. and these details are 100% correct. Let's fast forward to Intel's Skylake versus its Kaby Lake parts, now, or give their new i3 quadcore parts the middle finger because they're actually last years' i5 stack.... This is really quite normal. AMD has also been re-releasing Pitcairn until infinity, re-rebranding a whole product stack from HD- to R9, hell I could give you a dozen more examples of any hardware company.
Bottom line, your example makes no sense at all and its not the place.
And this one's for you
@RejZoR
http://www.tomshardware.com/news/MSI-GTX-660-670-overvolting-PowerEdition,18013.html
Nobody is clean
I am pretty sure if this was about Nvidia, AMD's name wouldn't have been mentioned by anyone. Right?
Also I can see in my little screenshot all the specs because I know that there are three different models(by the way, the memory speed for the DDR3 models is NOT guaranteed). Did you knew about those different models? Would you ever thought you need to go to Nvidia's site and double check that there is only one version of the card in the market? Is the average consumer going to do it? Would the average consumer go to AMD's site and double check if there are in fact two models available under the same name? Are those cases any different really?
And by the way, did you really avoided reading those two first lines of my post to have an excuse to make your post, or just missed them?
Let me help you with that