So you would deliberately limit yourself to a less capable card in the future (assuming correctly that at some point again Nvidia will have the top performing card again), even if it was cheaper? That doesn't make sense. I would think most logical people would try to buy the best performing card they can, no matter the brand.QUOTE]
Explain to the masses how GTX Titan-Z was a performance gain over 2-way SLI GTX Titan Blacks? What justified the $3,000 dollar price tag for a dual GPU from NVidia? In addition, explain to me how paying $100 to $200 for 10% more FPS (at best) with GTX 780 ti is more reasonable and practical over AMD R9-290x, within context, when both products were first released?
The marketing team is going to look at you with a blank stare and say "So the card is a 4GB card with 64 ROPs."
I honestly believe they would have just asked "so the card has 4GBs" and not waste their time understanding what a ROP is while enduring a headache.
Probably most of the action is entirely from nv fans -- some nv fans are sympathetic, and the other nv fans are pissed off. Probably Radeon users are like, oh is that smoke from the green camp over there, whatever can't hear the fuss over my gpu cooler.
Radeon users probably have better things to do with their time. I would say they are probably waiting patiently for the 3rd party benchmarks for R9-390x and 380x to be released in order to make a decision on a purchase. Honestly though, I buy cards from both camps, so I can't honestly speak on behalf of the Red Camp, but I prefer Red over Green. A majority of the Green Camp Consumers are either QQ-ing about it, defending NVidia, or arguing the rights and wrongs of the recent events...
Jen-Hsun makes another mistake in the letter: between the lines he is almost telling us we are ungrateful as if we don't know how good that GPU really is for the price - of course we know but it is beside the point. The point is we also know a dishonest practice when we see one. I'm quite pleased with my GTX 970 and not at all with dishonest nvidia practices.
Shots fired! You better watch what you say. NVidia might file a lawsuit on it's consumers. jk
For my own two cents:
Called it, saw it coming, not happy for NVidia consumers, Hsung is probably writing this response as a reaction to the lawsuits filed by consumers on their product... On a side note, if this is the surprised "Jack in the Box" in the GTX 970, this is giving me second thoughts about investing in a Maxwell-Titan or 2... Probably a smart move would be to wait a few months after release and see what kind of surprises Hsung has for it. Either that, stick to what I have, or move on to R9-390x.