Originally posted by Qaridarium
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
NVIDIA Linux Performance-Per-Dollar: What The RX 480 Will Have To Compete Against
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by computerquip View PostI'm unsure of why it matters when AMD is an international company...? Is there some conflict with Shanghai that I'm not aware of?
Originally posted by oooverclocker View PostSounds like Vega was a whole new architecture instead of a 350mm² RX 480 with HBM.Test signature
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by Anarchy View PostThat is inconsequential to the problem at hand. Right now AMD does not have a response to nvidia's Pascal. That should change by the end of the month, but if rx 480 has performance level similar to rx 390x then they've failed again.
I would love to understand the logic behind that, unless you are just saying "some people are stupid and that's what they will think".Test signature
- Likes 3
Comment
-
Originally posted by bridgman View Post
That seems like an odd comment - you're saying that if our midrange card doesn't outperform NVidia's high end card then we have failed somehow ?
I would love to understand the logic behind that, unless you are just saying "some people are stupid and that's what they will think".
Comment
-
Originally posted by bridgman View Post
That seems like an odd comment - you're saying that if our midrange card doesn't outperform NVidia's high end card then we have failed somehow ?
I would love to understand the logic behind that, unless you are just saying "some people are stupid and that's what they will think".
Maybe I'm wrong, so please correct me if that's the case, but nvidia's x(x)70 cards always end up as their midrange offerings. Unless something changes, nvidia is sure to start offering the gtx 1070 card for a lot cheaper than its current $400+ price just to counter AMD's rx 480 (although that is time dependent). Given the performance difference between the rx 390x and gtx 1070 most customers will decide that the latter is supreme even if it's more expensive and just marginally better, which will undermine AMD's position even more.
Comment
-
Originally posted by bridgman View Post
That seems like an odd comment - you're saying that if our midrange card doesn't outperform NVidia's high end card then we have failed somehow ?
I would love to understand the logic behind that, unless you are just saying "some people are stupid and that's what they will think".
Correct me if I'm wrong but nvidia's x(x)70 cards always end up as their midrange offerings, so once AMD releases the rx 480 nvidia might be inclined to substantially reduce the price of the gtx 1070. Although that's dependent on the time, customers might be inclined to consider the nvidia's midrange offering because of its (slightly?) better performance compared to the rx 480. my 2c.
Comment
-
I think it's confusing when high-end for Nvidia ends with 80 and for AMD 80 means mid-range.
Anyway, I'm thinking of buying 460 or 470 (AMD Radeon ofc) for my desktop later this year depending on how much they cost (in Finland!) and how they perform. I don't demand very much, but I also don't like to buy cards once a while. My current best setup has GeForce GTX 460 that I bought five years ago as brand new. It is enough for my purposes although I have to use proprietary drivers and I don't get Wayland that way (no Vulkan either!). The other computer has just Radeon HD 6670, that I bought second hand two years ago, and it doesn't quite cut it even for CS:GO at FullHD with quite low settings (haven't tried it lately though) so I'm thinking of replacing that.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Anarchy View Post
That is inconsequential to the problem at hand. Right now AMD does not have a response to nvidia's Pascal. That should change by the end of the month, but if rx 480 has performance level similar to rx 390x then they've failed again.
I dunno why people complicate things, as AMD going from 28 nm to 14 nm process and release 3 cards in price range of $100, $150 and $200. Cards are RX 460, RX 470 and RX 480. Without much detailing, for most users those can be seen as succesors of R7 360, R7 370 and R9 380. Basicaly newer cards will be sort of double faster then earlier from mid range, mostly thanks to new process and that is how people should look at these
Now, what this new middle range performance might touch or beat from earlier high end, should be interesting to see but is just an secondary question as real high end from new gen is yet to come
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by dungeon View PostNow, what this new middle range performance might touch or beat from earlier high end, should be interesting to see but is just an secondary question as real high end from new gen is yet to come
I think it's pretty interesting how AMD and Nvidia are both dealing with cost & yield issues, on the new node. I prefer AMD's strategy, if only they could've timed their launch to coincide with the GTX 1070's.
Comment
Comment