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NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3090 Ti Founders Edition

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The power consumption is so high with this one. More than a 100W comparing to 3090 without being much faster. The price kills too.
 
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I'm what you'd call a "serious professional" (freelance for over 20 years). The value proposition of quadros is worse even than 3090 etc as their performance is lower at the same price point as the geforce equivalent. Using unreal engine etc for visualisation/3d rendering as we do, or gpu based renderers like redshift, it makes most sense to get the best gaming cards available rather than quadros, and every single freelancer I know doing the same job as me does this. We ALL run 3090s not quadros.

Of course if you're doing Cad then quadros have those specific viewport accelerations, same for science etc. Doesn't apply to me.

I don't think this card makes much sense either though tbf. 3090 is the sweet spot if you can get it for MSRP (I was lucky at the start)
I'm in the same boat, I wear many hats but when I'm not in datacenters I spec machines for architects, engineers, and 3D modelers. I occasionally buy a Quadro or ask Nvidia to sample us a Quadro to check if there's anything we're missing out on by buying Geforces. Most of the CAD packages that were the realm of Quadros 20+ years ago now all run fine on even Intel IGPs.

Autodesk, Bentley, Dassault, McNeel, PTC Creo - all of their stuff might have specific viewport acceleration but viewport at 60fps or 20fps doesn't really change the user experience that much. I've yet to see even our most complicated models (that require 16GB+ cards just to open the file) fail to render viewports at less than 15fps on a lowly 3060 and modelling isn't exactly like a twitch shooter, even 10fps would be plenty. The reality is that 90% of what architects and engineers work on will run at >30fps viewport speeds in best quality with a pretty pedestrian GPU as long as there's enough VRAM for the entire model.

Like you, I'm seeing a shift to realtime rendering with Unreal/Unity/Enscape/Twinmotion taking the place in many instances of what CPU rendering used to do. All that really matters is GPU VRAM which is why we've been buying 2080Ti, 3060 12GB, and 3090 cards. I'd have bought RX6800 in quantity when they launched if I could have found any but retail availability was scarce, not even account managers could help. My two SI distributors weren't even optioning RX 6xxxx cards. They were paper-launched over here for the first 8 months, it would seem.

Very much appreciate that you took the time to register here and share your experience. Have you tried to bring down the VRAM requirements by using lower resolution models/textures? Would your clients ever notice?
It's a case of effort and whether that effort is cost-effective.

The people doing the modelling are usually on deadlines and simplifying the models wastes their time that could and should be spent on doing something more useful. Half the time they're not the creator of the whole model, it's a collaborative effort where they're forced to work with a bunch of externally-provided models or sub-models, all in a constant state of update. They could simplify the models to make it work better on their hardware, but the next revision of all that external data would just overwrite their simplifications and render it "time wasted"

When the employee costs $4000/month and the software license costs an additional $800/month, having them halve their workload just to save $1000 on a GPU isn't really the way it's done.
This is part of the justification for a Quadro's price tag, but unless you cannot actually open a file within the VRAM quota of a consumer GPU, there's no real incentive to spend 3x the money on the equivalent Quadro.
 
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Ummmm.....

"The real median personal income in the US in 2019 was $35,977/year."
"The median household income in the US in 2019 was $68,703"


Where did you find that less then $20,000 number from?
Yep, I derped and used some shitty sources. Pure lazyness. Addressed above too: here. Went looking for an international comparison (rather than sourcing number individually) and apparently stumbled onto something dubious that I really ought to have known better about. Still, as I said above, it hardly changes the crux of the argument - spending 5% of your annual income on a single PC component isn't much more realistic than 10%. Thought I would go back and strike out the poor sourcing and update it, but apparently there's a time limit on editing posts now?


Oh yeah I wonder why Nvidia stop making 2500usd GPUs like the Titan V and Titan RTX, maybe it's the free market that decided they are not worth making anymore :rolleyes:.
... or maybe they saw an opportunity to work towards pushing public expectations for GPU pricing higher through removing the "semi-pro" segmentation that the Titan brand carried? After all, the Titan brand worked quite well as a disincentive towards considering them gaming cards (not to mention the rather tiny differences over the top gaming cards, of course) - it was a clear "this isn't for you" demarcation line. So, in a basic predatory capitalist move, they stop calling them Titans, and instead pretend as if it's perfectly reasonable for "consumer" GPUs to sell for $1500+. It's not like this strategy is difficult to analyze or understand - for them, pushing peak pricing upwards is beneficial across the stack as it shifts the basis of comparison for lower end cards. $300 looks okay-ish, but perhaps a bit high, if the most expensive product in the range is $700. If that product is $1500, or $2000? $300 is a steal!
Didn't look like you came up with a reasonable solution between "corporate hellscape" and "totalitarian government" to me
Did I claim that I did? AFAIK, all I did was attempt to discuss something in between the two, while you were strawmanning me into some kind of totalitarian position. You seem to be incapable of telling the difference between discussing something and having the answers already.
instead you are just complaining about something you cannot change.
Ah, we're getting to the "debate is useless" argument for shutting down discussion now I see. You're running down the bad-faith arguing tactic checklist pretty quickly, you better pace yourself or you'll run out soon! But then again, we might as well shut down the forums, considering the vast majority of discussions here are just talking about things we cannot change. Go figure.
 
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Oh yeah I wonder why Nvidia stop making 2500usd GPUs like the Titan V and Titan RTX, maybe it's the free market that decided they are not worth making anymore :rolleyes:.

Out of the bunch the Titan V was the only one whose price was more or less justified, I feel. GV100 is such an absolutely massive piece of silicon. It was also an early warning as to why didn't want 815 mm² + HBM GPUs to become the norm.

@Casinowilhelm + cooling solution on quadros is also not ideal

Quadro/RTX enterprise cards run at much milder clocks, so their cooling solutions are not that underdimensioned, imho

The power consumption is so high with this one. More than a 100W comparing to 3090 without being much faster. The price kills too.

From experience, the extra wattage merely prevents the card from throttling, which is a *huge* deal in some games.
 
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Price creep, as you've somewhat covered is influenced and contributed to by many many things, the 3090Ti specifically, being a minor one if that. I'm not really interested too much in a discussion of all of the contributing factors, if we could even collectively name and quantify them.

I hate the price creep too, don't get me wrong, but to the people looking at the 3090Ti as some sort of price creep lighting rod and like Nvidia has some figurative gun to their head to buy it, and that's a pretty average take if not made in jest.
Yeah, I don't view it that way either, but given that it's the most extreme example so far (of what has been a rapidly accelerating trend for two generations now) is IMO a valid reason to discuss it. Not doing so will inevitably lead to the normalization of these kinds of prices, after all - you get used to the world being how it is unless you are regularly reminded that it doesn't have to be that way. So for me it's more about being able to maintain a critical distance to the operations of these corporations than anything else.
 
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... or maybe they saw an opportunity to work towards pushing public expectations for GPU pricing higher through removing the "semi-pro" segmentation that the Titan brand carried? After all, the Titan brand worked quite well as a disincentive towards considering them gaming cards (not to mention the rather tiny differences over the top gaming cards, of course) - it was a clear "this isn't for you" demarcation line. So, in a basic predatory capitalist move, they stop calling them Titans, and instead pretend as if it's perfectly reasonable for "consumer" GPUs to sell for $1500+. It's not like this strategy is difficult to analyze or understand - for them, pushing peak pricing upwards is beneficial across the stack as it shifts the basis of comparison for lower end cards. $300 looks okay-ish, but perhaps a bit high, if the most expensive product in the range is $700. If that product is $1500, or $2000? $300 is a steal!

Lol yeah so according to you the existence of 3090 Ti make the 3060Ti a steal, and not because the 3060Ti by itself has awesome price-to-perf and features set, sound pretty stupid reasoning to me :roll:.
 
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Lol yeah so according to you the existence of 3090 Ti make the 3060Ti a steal, and not because the 3060Ti by itself has awesome price-to-perf and features set, sound pretty stupid reasoning to me :roll:.
... sigh. Is reading comprehension really that much of a challenge? Because that's a really poor paraphrasing of my argument, to the degree that it entirely misrepresents what I'm saying. My point is that the higher the flagship-tier pricing, the more sensible "normal" prices will appear to potential customers, all other factors being equal. (Also, why specifically bring up the 3060 Ti, a $399 MSRP, ~$600 street price GPU?) I'm not saying anything about whether any given product is a good buy or not at its price point in its real-world competitive situation, I'm talking about how this affects public perceptions and expectations. I.e. marketing, not sales. It's essentially the same idea as the Overton Window, and how public performances of extreme points of view serve to shift it over time. Consistent exposure over time on a large enough scale inevitably leads to shifting perceptions of acceptability. It's admittedly a rough analogy (mostly because of the differences between product pricing and organized politics), but it's still a useful tool for describing how PR can work in non-immediate timeframes.

So, to get back to your poorly formulated example: the existence of the 3090 Ti serves to make the 3060 Ti look less bad, but more to the point it will lower expectations of acceptable value at lower price points and shift expectations for what is "reasonable" pricing higher over time. So, the existence of a $2000 3090 Ti makes the $400-cum-$600 3060 Ti look less bad (it could be more than 3x more expensive, after all), but far more importantly it would both ready the ground for >$2000 4090 Tis, as well as make any future price increase for the 60 Ti-tier look more understandable. This of course also combines with the excessive street prices we're seeing today, and the two can't readily be separated, but the effect is nonetheless there.
 
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... sigh. Is reading comprehension really that much of a challenge? Because that's a really poor paraphrasing of my argument, to the degree that it entirely misrepresents what I'm saying. My point is that the higher the flagship-tier pricing, the more sensible "normal" prices will appear to potential customers, all other factors being equal. (Also, why specifically bring up the 3060 Ti, a $399 MSRP, ~$600 street price GPU?) I'm not saying anything about whether any given product is a good buy or not at its price point in its real-world competitive situation, I'm talking about how this affects public perceptions and expectations. I.e. marketing, not sales. It's essentially the same idea as the Overton Window, and how public performances of extreme points of view serve to shift it over time. Consistent exposure over time on a large enough scale inevitably leads to shifting perceptions of acceptability. It's admittedly a rough analogy (mostly because of the differences between product pricing and organized politics), but it's still a useful tool for describing how PR can work in non-immediate timeframes.

So, to get back to your poorly formulated example: the existence of the 3090 Ti serves to make the 3060 Ti look less bad, but more to the point it will lower expectations of acceptable value at lower price points and shift expectations for what is "reasonable" pricing higher over time. So, the existence of a $2000 3090 Ti makes the $400-cum-$600 3060 Ti look less bad (it could be more than 3x more expensive, after all), but far more importantly it would both ready the ground for >$2000 4090 Tis, as well as make any future price increase for the 60 Ti-tier look more understandable. This of course also combines with the excessive street prices we're seeing today, and the two can't readily be separated, but the effect is nonetheless there.

You are describing people who buy stuff based on PR material and not the actual reviews, well suck to be those people I guess. But here you are talking to a bunch of techie who read through multiple reviews before making a purchase.

No one here would have any problem with 2000usd GPU if it had the same price-to-performance as the 3060 Ti, we are in a tech enthusiast forum after all.

So yeah the 3090Ti is a stupid GPU at 2000usd, but I'm open to future 2000usd GPU that completely decimate lower SKUs (like 1080 Ti vs 1080). I bet future 400usd GPU would provide good uplift over 3060Ti too, otherwise it make no sense to buy.
 
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but given that it's the most extreme example so far
Is it? I'd make the case that these products effectively replace TITAN class products, given they're absent from the current lineup, and a good proportion of similar buyers would consider them.

2017, TITAN V - $2999 USD
2018, TITAN RTX - $2499 USD

maybe they lowered the price of the 3090 relative to those to attract more buyers back to TITAN-esque products? Who knows, but examples of extreme price and power consumption aren't new to the 3090Ti, it's the product du jour.
is IMO a valid reason to discuss it. Not doing so will inevitably lead to the normalization of these kinds of prices, after all - you get used to the world being how it is unless you are regularly reminded that it doesn't have to be that way. So for me it's more about being able to maintain a critical distance to the operations of these corporations than anything else.
I mean, I certainly like your sentiment there, and boy do I wish we could make an impact. But I suppose I'm just too cynical to see this making a meaningful impact. People with deep pockets/willing to spend big/treat themselves for their hobbies will buy these products, you and I cannot talk them out of that. So to me, a lot of the ... lets say complaints and worry about these products is misplaced, they're never good value, and they almost never are the most efficient.

I think the best we can hope for is voting with wallets en masse and buying products in the 'meat' of the lineups, closer to the efficiency and price to performance sweetspot, but again, the cynic in me doesn't think the relative few of us who are super into this and are invested in the market can really make the difference you seek. Especially given the vast majority of gamers sit in that category, and already are at least trying to do that, and prices are still creeping up, and average people have paid crazy inflated market prices... the creep just feels ... inevitable, which of course to some extent it was always going to be.

In any case like I said I like your sentiment and I hope and wish we can influence the market, I just won't hold my breath for it.
 
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You are describing people who buy stuff based on PR material and not the actual reviews, well suck to be those people I guess. But here you are talking to a bunch of techie who read through multiple reviews before making a purchase.
No. I am not describing any particular group of people whatsoever - and that takes us a significant step towards identifying why you're so dead set on derailing what is otherwise a relevant and useful point of discussion: you're essentially enacting the neoliberal/late stage capitalist move of individualizing everything as much as possible, denying the existence of larger-scale structures. What I am describing is the large-scale movement of expectations and ideas over time, for a large-scale population. This includes everyone given sufficient time and exposure. Heck, due to the degree of technofetishism and upgrade mania typically found in tech enthusiast circles, one could make an equally strong argument for enthusiasts being less prone to criticise price hikes (as long as they come along with a perceived increase in absolute performance). Which is exactly what we're seeing with people making the "It might be expensive at $2k, but at least it's the fastest GPU around" argument.
No one here would have any problem with 2000usd GPU if it had the same price-to-performance as the 3060 Ti, we are in a tech enthusiast forum after all.
Nonsense. There are absolutely reasonable arguments to be made as to why the very existence of such a product tier is directly harmful to the overall PC (gaming or not) enthusiast scene. There are also arguments to be made for them being beneficial, and we can agree or disagree on those, but saying "no one here would have any problem" is some real overreach.

(Of course, a $2000 SKU delivering the same perf/$ of a nominally $400 SKU would also taint the value proposition of cheaper cards, going against the near-ubiquitous expectations that (down to a certain point) lower-priced SKUs deliver better overall value (in part due to economics of scale).)
So yeah the 3090Ti is a stupid GPU at 2000usd, but I'm open to future 2000usd GPU that completely decimate lower SKUs (like 1080 Ti vs 1080). I bet future 400usd GPU would provide good uplift over 3060Ti too, otherwise it make no sense to buy.
... so if AMD and Nvidia in the future just cripple their lower-tier GPUs sufficiently, you'll be fine with the well performing one costing $2000? Yeah, I know that's not what you're meaning to say, but your wording makes that an equally valid reading as the opposite. There's good reason to be careful with how you formulate your arguments.

As for future $400 GPUs delivering a good uplift over the 3060 Ti - that would be the hope, but developments over the past few years have been towards performance/$ stagnation more than anything else. Equally likely as things stand today is that the 4060 Ti will launch at $500-600 and deliver a performance increase equivalent to that price increase in %. It would be very nice to be wrong about that, but I'm not very hopeful.

Heck, the GTX 1080 Ti vs. the 1080 is an excellent example of the literal opposite of price creep. The non-Ti 1080 launched at "$599" with the real base price being the $699 FE pricing (as nearly all AIB models matched or exceeded that price, with only a few, low-stock exceptions). The 1080 Ti then launched a few months later at the same price, while delivering a 19%/28%/35% performance increase (1080p/1440p/2160p). For the same price. That is great value, and it's the opposite of price creep. Of course the 1080 on its part had pushed MSRPs for 80-tier cards $50-150 (non-FE and FE/most AIBs respectively), even exceeding the $650 MSRP of the 980 Ti, so there was some price creep there, but the 1080 Ti largely counteracted that, bringing the 1080 Ti within $50 of the 980 Ti launch price. Thus, the 1080 Ti is a perfect example of the exact opposite of what you're arguing.

On the other hand, for this generation of GPUs, even the MSRPs - which have mostly been way lower than street prices - have represented same-or-less perf/$ compared to previous-gen alternatives. This generation has been dominated by stagnant or dropping performance/$, which is unprecedented within the GPU space.

Another crucial distinction here that has disappeared with the death of the Titan moniker: xx80 Ti SKUs, despite their overall poor value compared to lower tier products, used to represent a "value" proposition compared to those, with >95% of their performance at half the price or less. Now, instead of that borderline consumer-friendly segmentation (that still had plenty of room for "if you have the money..." type of products), we have a never-ending runoff towards ever-higher "consumer" flagship prices. This is of course beneficial to profit-seeking corporations that don't care whatsoever about their customers, but ... well, I'm not beholden to them, nor do I have to accept the harmful, extremist ideology that type of dogma represents. Just because it's the dominant ideology currently, and legally required in some areas, does not make it inevitable or any less harmful.

Is it? I'd make the case that these products effectively replace TITAN class products, given they're absent from the current lineup, and a good proportion of similar buyers would consider them.

2017, TITAN V - $2999 USD
2018, TITAN RTX - $2499 USD

maybe they lowered the price of the 3090 relative to those to attract more buyers back to TITAN-esque products? Who knows, but examples of extreme price and power consumption aren't new to the 3090Ti, it's the product du jour.
There is definitely an interesting discussion to be had around the effects on pricing and customer perception that come with the death of the Titan sub-brand, and you can see some of my points of view on that above. It's a bit of a side discussion, but overall I see this as a conscious move aimed at normalizing these products and their prices as "consumer" rather than "prosumer" oriented (which was the target of the Titan brand in what little marketing it got - the Quadro for those not wanting to pay Quadro prices). I think the removal of the mental cut-off point of the Titan brand (signalling "this isn't for you, relax, go look at Geforce cards") is exactly what Nvidia were aiming for with this move, even if the 3090 and 3090 Ti are so to speak spiritual successors to that line of products. The absence of separate branding is, IMO, exactly the point, and exactly what makes it problematic.
I mean, I certainly like your sentiment there, and boy do I wish we could make an impact. But I suppose I'm just too cynical to see this making a meaningful impact. People with deep pockets/willing to spend big/treat themselves for their hobbies will buy these products, you and I cannot talk them out of that. So to me, a lot of the ... lets say complaints and worry about these products is misplaced, they're never good value, and they almost never are the most efficient.
I can definitely understand that, as I generally understand pessimism and cynicism towards the world in general as it stands today. I just refuse to give up and lay down and die, so to speak - 'cause the options are either giving up entirely, assimilating, or attempting resistance. And I don't want to give up on my favourite hobby, nor would I ever want to assimilate into this set of beliefs - so I don't have much of a choice.

It's the classic situation of those with money and other privileges always having an easier time overall - they are louder, more visible, typically lead easier lives and have more resources to spend in order to ensure that, giving them more freedom to speak up about their beliefs. Of course the PC scene also to some degree inherently privileges these positions through its constant chasing of performance, which thus inherently also privileges those with the fastest hardware to some degree. I mean, if everyone still gaming on a GTX 1060 and reasonably happy with that spent as much time arguing their point of view as those with high end flagship GPUs today do arguing for theirs, the discourse here would look quite different.
I think the best we can hope for is voting with wallets en masse and buying products in the 'meat' of the lineups, closer to the efficiency and price to performance sweetspot, but again, the cynic in me doesn't think the relative few of us who are super into this and are invested in the market can really make the difference you seek. Especially given the vast majority of gamers sit in that category, and already are at least trying to do that, and prices are still creeping up, and average people have paid crazy inflated market prices... the creep just feels ... inevitable, which of course to some extent it was always going to be.
Yeah, that's the problem with the concept of "voting with your wallet" - it essentially requires a utopian combination of engaged and concsious customers sufficiently informed to make conscious choices and sufficiently privileged to not choose what might otherwise fulfill their desired. Heck, there has been one single successful large-scale boycott in the history of the world - that against apartheid South Africa. Of course that also had a far larger target than the GPU industry, but that example tells us quite a lot about what is required for that type of movement to succeed. And, of course, history is littered with examples of failed attempts at similar movements with similar goals.

Of course, that feeling of inevitability that you describe is precisely the point - and one that corporations and corporate-friendly ideologues are explicitly and concertedly working towards. Disillusionment in your opposition is a far, far easier and more effective tool towards getting what you want than actively and openly fighting them. That's pretty much the entire reason why neoliberalism has grown to become the dominant economic system in the world today, despite essentially nobody outside of a small group of hardliners (the Nixon-Reagan-Thatcher idolizers) really believing that this economic system is good at all. It's a mode of politics that is predicated on tiring out your opposition by making seemingly logical claims ("cutting government expenses is good") that require complex explanations of why they are wrong, while also winning over a public that is suffering from an increasing attention overload and is effectively rendered unable to process long-ranging, complex processes and ideas through the sheer sensory and mental overload of how their day-to-day lives are. If people are too tired to listen to complex counter-argumnets, they're more likely to not disagree or agree with your position. If people need to work three jobs to pay rent, and thus can't afford to strike or attend a protest, you're less likely to have massive protests staged against your self-serving legislation. Distractions and straw men are extremely important parts of this ideology, and that's exactly what ludicrously priced products like this serve as. That they also come with an undertone of "man, it would be great if I could afford one of those" only helps their cause.
In any case like I said I like your sentiment and I hope and wish we can influence the market, I just won't hold my breath for it.
Yeah, me neither. But while I can't predict any kind of positive outcome of my own actions, I know that my inaction will definitely not have any postive outcomes. So, as long as I have the energy, I'll gladly be the difficult one pointing out the systemic problems of things like this. I might even get through to a couple of people. Then again, there's also a reason why I'm far less active on the forums now than I have been previously.
 
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Did I claim that I did? AFAIK, all I did was attempt to discuss something in between the two, while you were strawmanning me into some kind of totalitarian position. You seem to be incapable of telling the difference between discussing something and having the answers already.
Just put him on ignore like I did and enjoy your Monday. He's dragging two more of you further off-topic with straw man arguments and stupid shit that you never said, intentionally misunderstanding your words for the purpose of trolling, AFAICT....
 
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Regarding the value proposition of this card, I agree with the poster talking about how the high prices of newer SKUs is bringing up the "acceptable minimum" of lower SKU cards.

For example, if the 3090ti is MSRP $2000 and actually goes for $2400 street price then that becomes the new "ceiling" for a non-Titan SKU. That then allows them to increase the MSRP of the 3090, the 3080ti, etc. down the until even the 3060 becomes $400, etc. I'll be interested to see the pricing tiers of the 4000 series later this year (assuming it comes later this year).

Someone brought up cell phones as an example of how people can afford $1000 phones. Yes, they CAN, but it's on payment plans. It's added to their cell phone bill and then over the course of 2 years they pay it off or they trade it in after a year, etc. and add the new phone to a payment plan. That doesn't mean every phone buyer has $1000 cash ready to go that isn't obligated somewhere else. Paying $35-$40/month as payments is far more "feasible" for the average middle-class buyer.

Personally, when I'm ready to buy, I'll probably end up using something like Affirm, etc. to create a "payment plan" for whatever model I buy, such as the 3080 or 3080ti. Yes, it will probably cost me more due to interest payments, but it allows me to get the card "now" instead of saving for months or years to be able to pay cash. I pay it off over 2 years and can pay it off early with no penalty. That's not the best mindset, I know (I should be setting cash aside to pay for it eventually), but that's all I can do for now.
 
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Regarding the value proposition of this card, I agree with the poster talking about how the high prices of newer SKUs is bringing up the "acceptable minimum" of lower SKU cards.

For example, if the 3090ti is MSRP $2000 and actually goes for $2400 street price then that becomes the new "ceiling" for a non-Titan SKU. That then allows them to increase the MSRP of the 3090, the 3080ti, etc. down the until even the 3060 becomes $400, etc. I'll be interested to see the pricing tiers of the 4000 series later this year (assuming it comes later this year).

Someone brought up cell phones as an example of how people can afford $1000 phones. Yes, they CAN, but it's on payment plans. It's added to their cell phone bill and then over the course of 2 years they pay it off or they trade it in after a year, etc. and add the new phone to a payment plan. That doesn't mean every phone buyer has $1000 cash ready to go that isn't obligated somewhere else. Paying $35-$40/month as payments is far more "feasible" for the average middle-class buyer.

Personally, when I'm ready to buy, I'll probably end up using something like Affirm, etc. to create a "payment plan" for whatever model I buy, such as the 3080 or 3080ti. Yes, it will probably cost me more due to interest payments, but it allows me to get the card "now" instead of saving for months or years to be able to pay cash. I pay it off over 2 years and can pay it off early with no penalty. That's not the best mindset, I know (I should be setting cash aside to pay for it eventually), but that's all I can do for now.
That's IMO a pretty sensible approach - selectively and critically using downpayments to get stuff you can't afford outright is essentially mandatory in today's society. The days of people having the kind of economic security that the statement "just save up for it" made any real sense are long gone for the vast majority of people - with stagnant wages and ever-increasing costs of living, it's much more feasible to handle something "mandatory" (a bill, with consequences for not paying) than putting away money on your own accord. Saving is ultimately something only the reasonably wealthy can afford to do. That is of course not a wholesale endorsement of using downpayments - a lot of them come with absolutely horrible interest and late fees, so being selective is crucial, and it's equally crucial to not go overboard and sign up for something you might not be able to afford. But to put it this way: I'm not spending 6000 SEK on a Xbox Series X when I have a powerful PC, but if I qualified for Xbox All Access (I don't because the stupid credit check here in Sweden requires me having lived here for three years), I would have had one a year ago. It's the same with phones, like you say. Paying for $1000 phones outright is a privilege only a few people can afford (which is also a large part of why the phone repair industry is so vibrant - most people can't afford to replace their $1000 phone if it breaks!).

GPU makers have a vested interest in pushing public perceptions of how much a mainstream GPU is "worth" ever higher, as this increases average selling prices and has the potential to boost their margins significantly. Which, ultimately, means that they're looking for more ways to squeeze more money out of customers, ideally while giving as little back as possible.
 
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Regarding the value proposition of this card, I agree with the poster talking about how the high prices of newer SKUs is bringing up the "acceptable minimum" of lower SKU cards.

For example, if the 3090ti is MSRP $2000 and actually goes for $2400 street price then that becomes the new "ceiling" for a non-Titan SKU. That then allows them to increase the MSRP of the 3090, the 3080ti, etc. down the until even the 3060 becomes $400, etc. I'll be interested to see the pricing tiers of the 4000 series later this year (assuming it comes later this year).
You're right - what matters is the median cost.
The flagships can be as much as they want, but as long as the popular models that "do the job adequately" aren't massively increasing in price, we're all good.

The $200 sweet spot isn't $200 any more for various economic reasons I've gone into many times before (a 2016 $200 card costs as much to manufacture and sell as a $350 card in 2022), but if the mainstream card that tops the Steam hardware survey like the GTX 1060 has for years costs $500, then we, as consumers, have lost the fight against the corporations.
 

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This card is a colossal waste of money for... anyone. Costs $800 more than a 3080 Ti for a meagre 10% more performance. It's a joke.

24GB of ram is simply a waste of RAM on a gaming card, and Nvidia's marketing justifying it is quite frankly ridiculous (If you're a serious professional you'll be using a professional card, aka Quadro 4000, 4500, 5000, 5500, all at a similar price range and RAM capacity of this card.) Just like the 3090 before it, this card almost exclusively for rich gamers, or ones that have too much ego to get anything but 'the best'.
This 100% depends on the professional app being used. Majority of the time there isnt much benefit in a Quadro especially if the app is just OpenGL based. For instance my buddy that i build his workstations for uses CAD, and we are in close contact with the devs of the software he uses and they dont even recommend a Quadro to us so his newest rig got a RTX3090 in it for the VRAM. Which was cheaper and higher performing than any Quadro with 24gb or more VRAM we could get.
 

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Can somebody tell me if I do wrong.
I have old HP z840 workstation with dual e5-2667v3 processors. Would it work together with 3090ti? Or cpus are too old?
I use it for 3d modeling mainly, viewport performance really matter with heavy scene and files over 1Gb. I have 128gb ddr4 memory to handle big files.
 
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This 100% depends on the professional app being used. Majority of the time there isnt much benefit in a Quadro especially if the app is just OpenGL based. For instance my buddy that i build his workstations for uses CAD, and we are in close contact with the devs of the software he uses and they dont even recommend a Quadro to us so his newest rig got a RTX3090 in it for the VRAM. Which was cheaper and higher performing than any Quadro with 24gb or more VRAM we could get.
There's a small use case for the 3090, yes. It hovers in that sweet spot price-to-performance+RAM range between the A4000(16GB), A4500(20GB), A5000(24GB) & A6000(48GB). The 3090 Ti on the other hand really doesn't lie in any sweet spot, mostly due to its excessive power consumption and it's price.

There are a lot of advantages to the A5000 over the 3090 Ti. It will be slower in the vast majority of rendering tasks, but it also: has the same amount of RAM, ECC RAM if needed, similar price, lower power consumption(200W less), better support if needed, and is a 2 slot card so can be bridged 3x for added performance if raw GPU power is needed. AMD's W6800, has similar pro's and cons, likely similar performance to the A5000, and even more VRAM than either at 32GB.
 
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As for future $400 GPUs delivering a good uplift over the 3060 Ti - that would be the hope, but developments over the past few years have been towards performance/$ stagnation more than anything else. Equally likely as things stand today is that the 4060 Ti will launch at $500-600 and deliver a performance increase equivalent to that price increase in %. It would be very nice to be wrong about that, but I'm not very hopeful.
Was actually talking to someone last week about this. The current rumor/word from nvidia is that they want to keep producing 3000 series cards once the 4000 series comes out.

That if anything makes it way more likely they'll nerf the 4060. Heard alot of people the last few months say "oh i'll just wait till I can get 3080 performance on a $400 4060" but I doubt that comes close to truth.

If anything I think they'll keep producing the 3050, 3060, 3060ti at MSRP prices ($250, $329, $399) or maybe slightly under MSRP prices then jack the prices up on the 4060/4070.

That third party 4060 might be $500-529 range (basically 3070 original MSRP prices) but only 5-10% faster than the 3070. That if anything is more realistic then "$400 3080 coming soon"
 
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No. I am not describing any particular group of people whatsoever - and that takes us a significant step towards identifying why you're so dead set on derailing what is otherwise a relevant and useful point of discussion: you're essentially enacting the neoliberal/late stage capitalist move of individualizing everything as much as possible, denying the existence of larger-scale structures. What I am describing is the large-scale movement of expectations and ideas over time, for a large-scale population. This includes everyone given sufficient time and exposure. Heck, due to the degree of technofetishism and upgrade mania typically found in tech enthusiast circles, one could make an equally strong argument for enthusiasts being less prone to criticise price hikes (as long as they come along with a perceived increase in absolute performance). Which is exactly what we're seeing with people making the "It might be expensive at $2k, but at least it's the fastest GPU around" argument.

IDK if you are being hypocritical like @Chrispy_ or not but you bought an 6900XTXH, a very capitalistic GPU from AMD while preaching how the market is moving to the wrong direction. "Do as I say, not as I do" eh.
 
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Was actually talking to someone last week about this. The current rumor/word from nvidia is that they want to keep producing 3000 series cards once the 4000 series comes out.

That if anything makes it way more likely they'll nerf the 4060. Heard alot of people the last few months say "oh i'll just wait till I can get 3080 performance on a $400 4060" but I doubt that comes close to truth.

If anything I think they'll keep producing the 3050, 3060, 3060ti at MSRP prices ($250, $329, $399) or maybe slightly under MSRP prices then jack the prices up on the 4060/4070.

That third party 4060 might be $500-529 range (basically 3070 original MSRP prices) but only 5-10% faster than the 3070. That if anything is more realistic then "$400 3080 coming soon"
Yeah, sadly I think you're probably close to the truth. Which would be a damn travesty - but recent history shows us that things like these absolutely do happen.
 
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Was actually talking to someone last week about this. The current rumor/word from nvidia is that they want to keep producing 3000 series cards once the 4000 series comes out.

That if anything makes it way more likely they'll nerf the 4060. Heard alot of people the last few months say "oh i'll just wait till I can get 3080 performance on a $400 4060" but I doubt that comes close to truth.

If anything I think they'll keep producing the 3050, 3060, 3060ti at MSRP prices ($250, $329, $399) or maybe slightly under MSRP prices then jack the prices up on the 4060/4070.

That third party 4060 might be $500-529 range (basically 3070 original MSRP prices) but only 5-10% faster than the 3070. That if anything is more realistic then "$400 3080 coming soon"

Not gonna happen, the market is gonna get saturated with old Ampere GPU soon enough that in order to sell new GPU, both AMD and Nvidia have to make the new gen more appetizing: higher efficiency, better price to performance. Nvidia and AMD know from experience the blow back from crypto mining boom is coming soon
Nvidia stock drop 31% in 2018
 
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IDK if you are being hypocritical like @Chrispy_ or not but you bought an 6900XTXH, a very capitalistic GPU from AMD while preaching how the market is moving to the wrong direction. "Do as I say, not as I do" eh.
Shows how you shouldn't be presumptive, I guess? Yes, I am lucky enough to have one of those in my PC, though that is purely down to a once-in-a-lifetime circumstance, rather than my personal disposable income. The same applies to the whole system build, really. Also, before that I had kept my previous GPU for six years, FWIW. And outside of those special circumstances, I wouldn't have been able to afford a GPU at all in the market at that time. If things had been more normal I would most likely quite recently have bought a 6600, or at best a 6600 XT, and been using it with my old Ryzen 1600X. Still, I'm well aware of my privilege - which is of course not limited to this one lucky chance, but also includes things like being born in one of the richest, happiest, and most egalitarian countries on earth, among other things. Does that make me a hypocrite? Obviously, to some extent. Then again there is literally no person on earth who isn't. Owning an exorbitantly expensive GPU that I could never afford on my own this doesn't make me sleep any worse at night. I don't claim to be a paragon of non-hypocrisy, nor do I think being lucky like this robs me of the right to criticize harmful structures - quite the opposite, as someone in a very privileged position I have more opportunity to do so than most, and should take on that burden.

Also, describing a GPU as capitalistic gave me a good giggle. I get your meaning, but to use that word that way just betrays the complete lack of understanding beneath your arguments. I sincerely doubt that GPU holds to any particular ideology, though of course you're free to ask it.
 
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Not gonna happen, the market is gonna get saturated with old Ampere GPU soon enough that in order to sell new GPU, both AMD and Nvidia have to make the new gen more appetizing: higher efficiency, "better price to performance". Nvidia and AMD know from experience the blow back from crypto mining boom is coming soon
Nvidia stock drop 31% in 2018

lol really?

I knew Dr Strange's multi-verse cross dimension transgressions were real... you're definitely not from our neck of the heavenly constellations.
 
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Shows how you shouldn't be presumptive, I guess? Yes, I am lucky enough to have one of those in my PC, though that is purely down to a once-in-a-lifetime circumstance, rather than my personal disposable income. The same applies to the whole system build, really. Also, before that I had kept my previous GPU for six years, FWIW. And outside of those special circumstances, I wouldn't have been able to afford a GPU at all in the market at that time. If things had been more normal I would most likely quite recently have bought a 6600, or at best a 6600 XT, and been using it with my old Ryzen 1600X. Still, I'm well aware of my privilege - which is of course not limited to this one lucky chance, but also includes things like being born in one of the richest, happiest, and most egalitarian countries on earth, among other things. Does that make me a hypocrite? Obviously, to some extent. Then again there is literally no person on earth who isn't. Owning an exorbitantly expensive GPU that I could never afford on my own this doesn't make me sleep any worse at night. I don't claim to be a paragon of non-hypocrisy, nor do I think being lucky like this robs me of the right to criticize harmful structures - quite the opposite, as someone in a very privileged position I have more opportunity to do so than most, and should take on that burden.

Also, describing a GPU as capitalistic gave me a good giggle. I get your meaning, but to use that word that way just betrays the complete lack of understanding beneath your arguments. I sincerely doubt that GPU holds to any particular ideology, though of course you're free to ask it.

Well AMD locks down the normal 6900XT in order to sell the 6900XTXH, that's what I call a capitalistic move. FYI I'm from a communist country so all your preaching sound extremely hypocritical to me.

lol really?

I knew Dr Strange's multi-verse cross dimension transgressions were real... you're definitely not from our neck of the heavenly constellations.

Well let see how the crypto blow back is panning out shall we :)

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wolf

Better Than Native
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that's what I call a capitalistic move
Which is why I care far less about the companies themselves and just want to buy and enjoy kickass products. Neither are my friend, and I have little issue separating any feelings about either of them from the products they make, judged on their own merits.
 
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