There is a big pile of bullshit in that thread, that is something.
But since the subject is AMD/Nvidia, that is not a surprise (and both fanboys are guilty)
But anyway, AMD is somewhat Lying, or well masquerading the truth at least.
- Current Gen is not competitive at the spec level with Nvidia.
- They declared in another news today that they want to unify RDNA/CDNA because they have too much issue designing all theses chips. Also they changed their whole architecture way too much. If you look on the Zen side, they redesign the I/O die every 2 gen. Since RDNA, the whole GPU got redesigned each generation and they had to do something similar for CNDA. This is way too much for them and it's not efficient at all.
- I assume that RDNA 4 is bellow initial expectation (when they did the first design). They aren't expecting to be able to compete with it on the high end no matter what they do, it will be a loss.
- They probably have low hope too for RDNA 5 but they need to focus quickly and get back on track to regain market share and be competitive for the next generation of consoles.
- They then make the decision to scrap what would be unprofitable anyway, the high end, and focus on the mid range where they could still sell some GPU.
This just seems like their strategy is to survive for few years while they get their shit together.
That is fine, they were not on the path of winning anyway with Radeon. They do not seems to divest from the adventure. They just seems to focus. Let's hope they get back on their feets quickly. Maybe they can do in few years a "real Ryzen moment". I do not think they right now know what need to be done to regain market leadership.
Nvidia having no competition is great for them on the short term. But company that have near monopolistic market share and low competition in tech have always failed in the long run. They generally transform themselves after few year in a market milking machine instead of being a innovation machine and they get caught flat footed when competition is back.
It have happen to Intel, IBM, etc,
Personally i don't care much if the market slow down. I would for sure like to be able to upgrade to newer higher end GPU for cheap frequently, but at the same time, i recall how long i had my i7 2600K and i wouldn't mind keeping a GPU that is capable to playing games greatly for that long.
There is positive in everything.
But since the subject is AMD/Nvidia, that is not a surprise (and both fanboys are guilty)
But anyway, AMD is somewhat Lying, or well masquerading the truth at least.
- Current Gen is not competitive at the spec level with Nvidia.
- They declared in another news today that they want to unify RDNA/CDNA because they have too much issue designing all theses chips. Also they changed their whole architecture way too much. If you look on the Zen side, they redesign the I/O die every 2 gen. Since RDNA, the whole GPU got redesigned each generation and they had to do something similar for CNDA. This is way too much for them and it's not efficient at all.
- I assume that RDNA 4 is bellow initial expectation (when they did the first design). They aren't expecting to be able to compete with it on the high end no matter what they do, it will be a loss.
- They probably have low hope too for RDNA 5 but they need to focus quickly and get back on track to regain market share and be competitive for the next generation of consoles.
- They then make the decision to scrap what would be unprofitable anyway, the high end, and focus on the mid range where they could still sell some GPU.
This just seems like their strategy is to survive for few years while they get their shit together.
That is fine, they were not on the path of winning anyway with Radeon. They do not seems to divest from the adventure. They just seems to focus. Let's hope they get back on their feets quickly. Maybe they can do in few years a "real Ryzen moment". I do not think they right now know what need to be done to regain market leadership.
Nvidia having no competition is great for them on the short term. But company that have near monopolistic market share and low competition in tech have always failed in the long run. They generally transform themselves after few year in a market milking machine instead of being a innovation machine and they get caught flat footed when competition is back.
It have happen to Intel, IBM, etc,
Personally i don't care much if the market slow down. I would for sure like to be able to upgrade to newer higher end GPU for cheap frequently, but at the same time, i recall how long i had my i7 2600K and i wouldn't mind keeping a GPU that is capable to playing games greatly for that long.
There is positive in everything.