Your explanations are as superfluous as they are rhetorical. Your flaw in thinking is that what I stated was incorrect. It is not. Please do carry on.
There is no flow in thinking, but there are different narratives, one of which was used to show something different from what the other members were explaining, hence a glitch. This is what you wrote earlier:
"...if you START at 50% and go to 100%, you might be doubling the performance, but you're still only increasing by 50%"
Can you start anything at, say, 50%, in vacuum, without relation to a reference point? You have not explained the logic of this reasoning to other members to show them the difference of taking this perspective in that context. It appeared as incorrect. Below is why.
Let's put what you wrote in context and follow that logic of reasoning to try to find out when we could really "start at 50%" with anything in computing.
- let's assume that a starting point for best GPU1 last year was 50 fps. This is represented as 100% because GPU1 is on the top of performance chart
- can this be a starting point "at 50"%? It can't, because GPU1 is 100% at the moment and one data point. Ok, all good.
- new GPU2 this year doubles the performance and scores 100 fps. It is 100% faster and this is new 100%, so GPU1 is not anymore 100%
- now we have two data points. Is this the moment we can introduce the idea of "if you start at 50%..."?
- possibly, but would it be meaningful? Let's check it out.
- GPU1 now has 50% of performance of GPU2, but GPU2 is still 100% faster than GPU1
- has the performance of GPU2 increased by 50%, from "GPU1 50%" (50 fps) to "GPU2 100%" (100 fps)? The answer is yes, according to your proposition.
- GPU2 is still 100% faster than GPU1, not 50% faster, despite the wording "you're still only increasing by 50%"
- there are two narratives here, indvidual GPU performance improverment and wider, gen-to-gen performance improvement, which you usuallly need 3 data points for as "start at 50%" also comes from somewhere
- I get what you mean; what was "100%" yesterday becomes "50%" today and there is new "100%" now, therefore generational performance increases by 50%
- such narrative needs more context rather than being abstracted from two GPU data points only
- GPU3 brings 150 fps and becomes new "100%". It's 50% faster than GPU2 and 300% faster than GPU1
- at this point, we can say that top SKU in each generation brings 50% more performance overall than the previous one
- you are correct to use generic narrative to show gen-to-gen percentage increase, but you need to mention reference point and give it context
- other members were focused on individual component difference
- we just need to be careful in which context we use those narratives, as they serve to show different things