I argued with people on Pascal launch who said 1080 was not enough of a step forward from their 980 Ti's and that 980 Ti overclocks to 1500Mhz easily etc. As if 1080 could not OC to 2000Mhz+
"comprehensive package" & "greater quality"
Also im glad you know already how N31 will perform and what issues (if any) it will have.
We normal people will wait for reviews and prices before deciding. Not blindly buying from company N.
I like how he declares chiplets to be "gimmicky", how can you call something a "gimmick" when literally the entire industry is moving in that direction?
I seriously do not understand those that cheer for Nvidia or Intel... In terms of pure self-interest and what's more advantageous for the consumer, everyone should be cheering for AMD. The better AMD does against Intel and Nvidia, the more likely we get larger performance increases between generations, the more likely prices go down, the more likely innovation is pushed further, faster.
We all remember what the CPU market was prior to ryzen, right? 4% generational increases, 4 core stagnation, and all at a high price...alder lake and raptor lake would not exist without Ryzen.
And let's look at the GPU market, without RDNA2 mounting such a fierce competition, there's no doubt Nvidia's cards would be more expensive than they already are... (BTW, AMD is able to compete with Nvidia while having less than half the R&D budget, $5.26 billion vs $2 billion and AMD has to divide that $2 billion between graphics and x86 and x86 being the larger, more lucrative market, it must get the majority of those funds). And look at the latest Nvidia generation to be released, all the rumors of huge power consumption increases are evidence that Nvidia is doing everything in its power to push performance and all due to RDNA3.
I'm not saying everyone should be AMD fanboys, but don't the people who cheer on Intel and Nvidia realize that, at least until AMD has gotten closer to 50% market share in dGPU and x86 (especially enterprise and mobility, the two most lucrative x86 segments), victories for Intel and Nvidia inherently equate to losses for consumers? That these people who wish for AMD failure would have us plunged into a dark age even worse than the pre-ryzen days in both x86 and graphics... Sorry for the off topic rant, but I just don't get it when people are cheering for Nvidia prior to the products even being released, and by extension, cheering for reduced competition in the market... I guess the desire to create a parasocial relationship with whatever brand they deem to most likely be the winner is stronger than supporting what's best for your own material self-interest.