- Joined
- Jul 5, 2016
- Messages
- 155 (0.05/day)
System Name | Purple Stuff |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Core I7-8700K @ 5.0 Ghz |
Motherboard | Asus ROG Strix Z370-F Gaming |
Cooling | NZXT Kraken X62 |
Memory | Corsair Vengence 16 GB DDR4 @ 3600 Mhz |
Video Card(s) | Asus ROG Strix GTX 1080 TI |
Storage | Samsung EVO 960 500 GB, HDD 4TB WD Black, SSD Crucial MX400 1TB |
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Case | Phanteks Enthoo Evolv ATX Tempered Glass |
Power Supply | Seasonic Focus + Platinum 850 W |
Mouse | Steelseries Rival 700 |
Keyboard | Razer Blackwidow Chroma V2 |
Software | Win 10 Pro |
You just don't want to understand what I am describing.
All of this happened after AMD had very competitive products and still couldn't get market share , people chose Nvidia long before Pascal arrived. Your complaints are a direct result of that. AMD simply does not have a insensitive anymore to go all out on consumer graphics knowing that it would still not be enough and it would not pay off in the end (as prove to happen before).
The blame lies 100% on those who have happily paid 700$ for what was a mid tier GPU. If people can't say no to getting ripped off even where there is no completion then , without questions , they are at fault too.
Erm... who said anything only about Pascal? Here's the deal. AMD had better products (and yes they still do as you said Polaris) Hawaii comes to mind those things were actually better than Kepler (still are). If you can't sell something that's better than what the competition has what can be the problem then? Hint: You have the marketing campaign of an unnamed thrift shop (this would translate as bad PR). If AMD doesn't have the "incentive" to actually be at least considered on all segments they might just well sell the heck out and let somebody that can handle this thing better (A.E. The only things that are stopping Intel right now to make GPUs are the patents from both nVidia and AMD that keep them on lock - the would have the resources to do something out of that hot pile of mess that used to be ATI, or Samsung maybe.
As for paying $700 for a GPU. Yep, myself included, not because I wanted to it was because I had wait for the competition to come up with something after a whole damn year and to my shock and awe, it was the same thing that was on already out on the market. This isn't a choice per say, and certainly isn't nVidia's fault for putting out a product to fit my needs. Don't mean to burst your bubble but if AMD's choice is not to compete in a segment is doing far worse damage to their market share than not being able to outsell the competition. The only thing people that bought into Pascal's high end are at fault is not being able to choose after a certain price-point due to lack of competition. It's not your or mine and any one else's fault that AMD refuses to leave a segment alone - It's not like AMD's on welfare and we have to support it. The current state of the market is there because nVidia had the right sales pitch and AMD didn't (look at the 960 which was sub 380/x performance which the latter ending up outsold ...in large numbers oh and the 960 was a bit more expensive as well - This is what good marketing can bring). Let's face it back in Hawaii days you would've at least gave those cards a look now you have what again? Oh and Hawaii sold (key word as in they actually sold something). Just my $0.02 on the matter.
The trend will continue as long as they have dominance. If they price a high end GPU at $5999.99 for the consumer market it won't sell much but it will sell. Somebody out there would buy it for the performance (hence why Titans which are a terrible price/perf buy... yet it's amazing they still sell). Basically if you want performance you pay for it (goes for both camps) and at this point AMD has nothing to hold against nVidia when it comes to high-end stuff let alone nVidia's budget for PR ... I won't even comment on R&D. And yes actually the competition can drive the price be it up or down. So... ehll yes it's on AMD for the MSRP values (right now ... erm... nevermind the pricing is a bad joke already - which at this point neither AMD or nVidia are at fault for) and for leaving so much leverage for nVidia to have on the high-end market.