- Joined
- Mar 18, 2015
- Messages
- 2,963 (0.84/day)
- Location
- Long Island
Shakespeare said it best .... "Much ado about nothing". Component design involves providing a balance between performance and cost. The cost of Nvidia's top consumer card, adjusted for inflation. has averaged $700 since the year 2000. With any given price target, technology will allow acertain level of performance... there's no nystery here.... usually a platinum PSU costs more than a Gold which in turn costs more than a silver. No company owes the market Platinum performance for the price of a Gold.
As usual, folks rushed out to buy the new shiny thing, and as usual will experience the bugaboos that comes with 1st stepping designs. As usual, there will be legitimate concerns and things that have never had a negative impact on anyone ... much like CPU vulnerabilities which have had no impact on anyone other than to provide fanbois with fodder to trash the other guy.
So yes, .....
a) Early adopters are simply unpaid beta testers
b) Early adopters, will pay more
c) Early adopters will see more headaches, drivers, BIOS, etc
d) Early adopters will suffer thru problems that are will be fixable
e) Early adopters will suffer thru problems that are not be fixable, and your stuck
Here, we had everybody jumping on nvidia and it's pretty much all about nothing. Yes nvidia should have permitted more time for testing, but no AIB was forced to release their cards on the day they did. Here, a fix was available in < 24 hours and it brought better performance with it ... this will continue in the next few months. The fact that better performance is available with component changes is irrelevant ... if Seasonic put Platinum level componentry in the Gold rated PSUs. they'd have improved energy performance. And then it would have the cost of the Platinum PSU.
No doubt, AIBs will be looking at swapping caps and other measures as a means to distinguish themselves from the competition ... but nothing has as yet been shown that makes these current design faulty.
As usual, folks rushed out to buy the new shiny thing, and as usual will experience the bugaboos that comes with 1st stepping designs. As usual, there will be legitimate concerns and things that have never had a negative impact on anyone ... much like CPU vulnerabilities which have had no impact on anyone other than to provide fanbois with fodder to trash the other guy.
So yes, .....
a) Early adopters are simply unpaid beta testers
b) Early adopters, will pay more
c) Early adopters will see more headaches, drivers, BIOS, etc
d) Early adopters will suffer thru problems that are will be fixable
e) Early adopters will suffer thru problems that are not be fixable, and your stuck
Here, we had everybody jumping on nvidia and it's pretty much all about nothing. Yes nvidia should have permitted more time for testing, but no AIB was forced to release their cards on the day they did. Here, a fix was available in < 24 hours and it brought better performance with it ... this will continue in the next few months. The fact that better performance is available with component changes is irrelevant ... if Seasonic put Platinum level componentry in the Gold rated PSUs. they'd have improved energy performance. And then it would have the cost of the Platinum PSU.
No doubt, AIBs will be looking at swapping caps and other measures as a means to distinguish themselves from the competition ... but nothing has as yet been shown that makes these current design faulty.