- cross-posted to:
- hardware@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- hardware@lemmy.ml
I have obviously not been paying enough attention to the GPU space recently. Isn’t a $300 gpu with these performance numbers a good thing? Is it just that its performance isn’t where we think it should be based on its generation?
Pretty much confirmed to be a $299 XX50.
There’s no reason for nvidia to care about the gamers anymore. In the past they were slutting for crypto miners and now that it has died out the ai is the new money train. And because ai has REAL and very impactful uses it means that nvidia won’t be caring about gamers for a very long time if at all.
This is a $300 card because it’s priced at $300.
This card is genuinely an RTX 4050, labeled as a 4060, charging as much. This also doesn’t factor that NVIDIA has slowly been lowering the naming scheme over the last few years, so they could increase the price for lower tier cards, but bumping up the name. The ti/super names make it easier.
But what these reviews have confirmed is that the performance is sometimes worse than a 3060, with lower specs, years after release. Consider this with just the fact that the 3090 to 4090 saw a +70% increase in performance.
With this card struggling to match the previous gen '60, this isn’t a GPU that is the same chip stack as the 3060 was in its lineup.
We have seen around a +25% improvement in performance per year in Graphics cards, however both chip makers have been increasing pricing around the same as well, while enough general consumers don’t know that means relative value is declining for the sake of increased profits.
NVIDIA just became a trillion dollar company.
NVIDIA just became a trillion dollar company.
Yeah, because of ai, not gamers, they won’t change the way they work with gamers.
They will, they don’t manufactur their chips which means they bid for how many processors they can have made at a given rate.
What this means for the GeForce brand is that it has to compete internally with the more profitable AI chips.
FAB volume limits are important enough an issue that governments are investing billions per year to resolve, but demand just keeps going up.
GeForce getting less of NVIDIA’s FAB allocation means lower yield, less units with the AI margins in mind means that NVIDIA can & will demand greater margins per unit for their consumer chips.
A lot of tech enthusiasts want GeForce to split from NVIDIA so that they can have a separate internal desire to be competitive again.