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System Name | Tiny the White Yeti |
---|---|
Processor | 7800X3D |
Motherboard | MSI MAG Mortar b650m wifi |
Cooling | CPU: Thermalright Peerless Assassin / Case: Phanteks T30-120 x3 |
Memory | 32GB Corsair Vengeance 30CL6000 |
Video Card(s) | ASRock RX7900XT Phantom Gaming |
Storage | Lexar NM790 4TB + Samsung 850 EVO 1TB + Samsung 980 1TB + Crucial BX100 250GB |
Display(s) | Gigabyte G34QWC (3440x1440) |
Case | Lian Li A3 mATX White |
Audio Device(s) | Harman Kardon AVR137 + 2.1 |
Power Supply | EVGA Supernova G2 750W |
Mouse | Steelseries Aerox 5 |
Keyboard | Lenovo Thinkpad Trackpoint II |
VR HMD | HD 420 - Green Edition ;) |
Software | W11 IoT Enterprise LTSC |
Benchmark Scores | Over 9000 |
Maybe not in yours, but It is in most consumers' eyes. AMD offered the better performance against 3070 for more giving Nvidia opportunity to launch 3070TI and the same performance as 3080 for 50 bucks less without possibility of AI upscaling and poorer ray tracing capabilities. All that is working for AMD is more vram. AMD is acting like it owns 80% not 20% of the DIY GPU market. It's just silly if they can't see that. I'm starting to believe they're content with dominating consoles and staying marginal player in gaming PC GPU market.
Doubtful. We've already seen how tables can turn when it comes to these things. Intel's mindshare is quickly waning for example. It took Ryzen a few generations, you can expect similar with RDNA2. That's why I'm saying, you're probably going to be right, but don't mistake that for a lack of change in perspective. People need to ease into these things, and AMD has a lot of wiggle room here in terms of price that Nvidia really doesn't have. They will definitely be eating further into their margin than AMD this time around.
But the bigger issue is the mid-term to long-term market for Nvidia. Ampere was supposed to be their big overhaul right, I mean, this is FINALLY the Volta we always drooled over, really, all RT capable and everything with top 4K perf. So what's next for NV? How do you scale up a 320W board that is already out of balance in multiple ways? I mean its great they have GDDR6X. But they can't get a wider bus for it really without cutting on core power budget. What's their step up now?
AMD however is now in a position where Nvidia was during Pascal. Memory efficiency that is out of reach for its competitor. Boost that leaves a major gap with competitor. Feature parity with current day hardware and software. AMD can leverage technology that Nvidia simply doesn't have, nor can access easily. They've got a design win here and its ten times more impressive than Nvidia repurposing their cores for RT.
We find ourselves now, immediately after this presentation... considering what magic rabbit Huang has left in the hat. Because he needs one badly.
A hidden motivator though might the realization for customers that AMD Is also in the consoles for a while now. That is why the feature parity bit matters so much. If the GPUs can do the same things, show the same picture, why would you not switch? There is familiarity with both brands after all.
Fingers crossed now for no driver oopsies.
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