- Joined
- Jun 19, 2024
- Messages
- 416 (1.76/day)
System Name | XPS, Lenovo and HP Laptops, HP Xeon Mobile Workstation, HP Servers, Dell Desktops |
---|---|
Processor | Everything from Turion to 13900kf |
Motherboard | MSI - they own the OEM market |
Cooling | Air on laptops, lots of air on servers, AIO on desktops |
Memory | I think one of the laptops is 2GB, to 64GB on gamer, to 128GB on ZFS Filer |
Video Card(s) | A pile up to my knee, with a RTX 4090 teetering on top |
Storage | Rust in the closet, solid state everywhere else |
Display(s) | Laptop crap, LG UltraGear of various vintages |
Case | OEM and a 42U rack |
Audio Device(s) | Headphones |
Power Supply | Whole home UPS w/Generac Standby Generator |
Software | ZFS, UniFi Network Application, Entra, AWS IoT Core, Splunk |
Benchmark Scores | 1.21 GigaBungholioMarks |
No it isn't. As @Bwaze mentioned, it's Nvidia's choice to not keep up with the demand.
Do you have any idea what a supply chain is? Or do you think TSMC is the Amazon of chip making and can get your order to you in two days
![Roll :roll: :roll:](https://tpucdn.com/forums/data/assets/smilies/roll-v1.gif)
No company in Nvidia’s position is going to undership - that’s what AMD does after they channel stuff. Nvidia is selling every chip they can get their hands on - about three BILLION dollars worth a week. You are clearly ignorant of what kind of scale Nvidia operates at. They are literarily buying all the GDDR7 and HBM3e memory being produced. Think about that for a moment. There’s entire memory fabs sold out for over a year just supplying Nvidia’s needs.
JFC, they are buying packaging from Intel of all companies.
Are you getting a clue yet?
Anyway I‘m sure you can provide citations for your position right? Right??
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