- Joined
- Sep 2, 2022
- Messages
- 92 (0.11/day)
- Location
- Italy
Processor | AMD Ryzen 9 5900X |
---|---|
Motherboard | ASUS TUF Gaming B550-PLUS |
Memory | Corsair Vengeance LPX DDR4 4x8GB |
Video Card(s) | Gigabyte GTX 1070 TI 8GB |
Storage | NVME+SSD+HDD |
Display(s) | Benq GL2480 24" 1080p 75 Hz |
Power Supply | Seasonic M12II 520W |
Mouse | Logitech G400 |
Software | Windows 10 LTSC |
This thing that NVIDIA should make its industrial patents free and open source is funny, probably someone writes from fantasy land.
When a company invest millions or billions to develope new technologies, then it needs to get that money back to stay alive and grow.
FIAT and Magneti Marelli many years ago invented the common rail technology for car engines, investing billions in research. Then they offered the others car manufacturers to use that tech under license. "Want to use it, then you have to pay a fee!" That's how things works with companies of this kind. They don't work pro bono and they have to stay ahead of their competitors to survive and make money.
NVIDIA introduced Cuda when? in 2006? and in most recent years the RT and Tensor cores, and finally Optix. All this hardware is used both by games and professional softwares.
Since then AMD has done nothing to catch them. If you decide to go with Open CL, then you have to invest in that and support (with money!) the software houses in order to see their programs making use of Open CL and of your hardware.
AMD introduced HIP only when the Blender devs announced that they would have abandoned Open CL support with build 3.0: later in 2021. This just to show how lazy they can be. Well, HIP is still slower than Cuda and doesn't support all the AMD gpus. If you use your pc also for content creation, the AMD gpus don't even come in consideration nowadays. One can't blaime NVIDIA for this, but AMD. Don't look at this market just with the eyes of the gamer: the green cards offer more, you can use them for more stuff, not just for gaming.
I had both brands and I recently switched to a GTX because I needed Cuda. Now I want Optix and I'll buy a RTX as soon as I can. I can't be mad with NVIDIA for this, I'm glad that they made this technology and hardware instead. It costs a lot? Yes. But they offer me more.
This Portal mod is a show-off made by the NVIDIA engineers to show what this modding tool is capable off. Has just been released. Hasn't been done by a hundred modders, but by a group of engineers that halfway in the making decided that was good enough for its purpose. When the modding community will start making stuff with it, then they will give feedbacks, ask for improvements and optimizations. In a world where triple A games are released full of bugs at full price, you expect that a free tech demo is free from problems?
And, by the way, why NVIDIA should optimize this mod also for AMD and Intel gpus? Why they should care? They are competitors. It's on them to optimize their drivers and catch up. Lisa Su and the AMD shareholders could reduce their cut and spend those billions in research. People here speak like NVIDIA is the bad wolf and AMD the Little Red Riding Hood, when instead they are as greedy as the others.
When a company invest millions or billions to develope new technologies, then it needs to get that money back to stay alive and grow.
FIAT and Magneti Marelli many years ago invented the common rail technology for car engines, investing billions in research. Then they offered the others car manufacturers to use that tech under license. "Want to use it, then you have to pay a fee!" That's how things works with companies of this kind. They don't work pro bono and they have to stay ahead of their competitors to survive and make money.
NVIDIA introduced Cuda when? in 2006? and in most recent years the RT and Tensor cores, and finally Optix. All this hardware is used both by games and professional softwares.
Since then AMD has done nothing to catch them. If you decide to go with Open CL, then you have to invest in that and support (with money!) the software houses in order to see their programs making use of Open CL and of your hardware.
AMD introduced HIP only when the Blender devs announced that they would have abandoned Open CL support with build 3.0: later in 2021. This just to show how lazy they can be. Well, HIP is still slower than Cuda and doesn't support all the AMD gpus. If you use your pc also for content creation, the AMD gpus don't even come in consideration nowadays. One can't blaime NVIDIA for this, but AMD. Don't look at this market just with the eyes of the gamer: the green cards offer more, you can use them for more stuff, not just for gaming.
I had both brands and I recently switched to a GTX because I needed Cuda. Now I want Optix and I'll buy a RTX as soon as I can. I can't be mad with NVIDIA for this, I'm glad that they made this technology and hardware instead. It costs a lot? Yes. But they offer me more.
This Portal mod is a show-off made by the NVIDIA engineers to show what this modding tool is capable off. Has just been released. Hasn't been done by a hundred modders, but by a group of engineers that halfway in the making decided that was good enough for its purpose. When the modding community will start making stuff with it, then they will give feedbacks, ask for improvements and optimizations. In a world where triple A games are released full of bugs at full price, you expect that a free tech demo is free from problems?
And, by the way, why NVIDIA should optimize this mod also for AMD and Intel gpus? Why they should care? They are competitors. It's on them to optimize their drivers and catch up. Lisa Su and the AMD shareholders could reduce their cut and spend those billions in research. People here speak like NVIDIA is the bad wolf and AMD the Little Red Riding Hood, when instead they are as greedy as the others.