- Joined
- Jun 19, 2024
- Messages
- 379 (1.66/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
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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