CyberPunked
Member
4GB for the 980 seems too low. Considering it's a generation ahead of AMDs 290x, which has 4GB.
4GB for the 980 seems too low. Considering it's a generation ahead of AMDs 290x, which has 4GB.
I see your specific word choice, and I must admit, I like it.There should be some 8GB variants for people who belive that.
4GB for the 980 seems too low. Considering it's a generation ahead of AMDs 290x, which has 4GB.
Maybe Nvidia saw that and how it built up tons of hype and deliberately allowed this level of leaks to happen?I feel like not only the discussion, but even the leaked pics, the leaked benchmarks, everything, is a total repeat of Kepler's launch.
It's almost uncanny.
Yeah, but Kepler's reception was luke-warm at best.
If you can't get everybody fired up by performance increases...then you have to get them fired up with price/performance improvements. AMD has done that recently.
10% better than a 780ti at $450 US would get people psyched, I think. Except those among us in the futurist crowd who are perpetually waiting for the next thing. They won't be happy until NV announces the 2nm process technology.
Question: Now I am wondering....based on the 285, can we guess anything about higher-end Tonga releases upcoming...? Scott at Techreport seems pretty enthused on the most recent podcast.
If AMD take the plunge with a 20nm lineup and nice performance increases in early 2015 or so, it'll definitely leave Nvidia sidelined. For a while. The efficiency of Maxwell combined with a die shrink could ultimately leave Nvidia with the superior GPU line-up, but of course AMD can always play ball with pricing(there's no such thing as a bad card, so long as the price is right).Besides a 285X, there's nothing else out there, AMD has kept really quiet. But I have a feeling we're in for a real treat with the 300 series.
It is possible that the 970s will eventually feature 6gb variants?
Anyone know if Nvidia has anything planned for the $200-250 range?
I wonder how that'll go.They'll probably brand the 950Ti intended chip as a $279 960. Welcome to the modern GPU market.
There's literally nothing solid to go off of yet, other than that there are new cards coming out, they are on Maxwell, and they should offer better performance:$ than current stuff.Anyone know if Nvidia has anything planned for the $200-250 range?
Anyone know if Nvidia has anything planned for the $200-250 range?
Well, this whole thing has been really disconcerting. Two years now and we're still on 28nm? Not cool, man. Not cool.
If you can't get everybody fired up by performance increases...then you have to get them fired up with price/performance improvements. AMD has done that recently.
10% better than a 780ti at $450 US would get people psyched, I think. Except those among us in the futurist crowd who are perpetually waiting for the next thing. They won't be happy until NV announces the 2nm process technology.
Question: Now I am wondering....based on the 285, can we guess anything about higher-end Tonga releases upcoming...? Scott at Techreport seems pretty enthused on the most recent podcast.
There's never going to be a huge leap like there has in the past. Probably.
What they do now is release the mid and low end cards from a new architecture as the "high end" models. Then they release the high end cards as really expensive new high end cards.
So rather than going from, lets say, 4870->5870, the 5870 would have been released as the 6970, with the 5870 actually being the 5780. I hope that makes sense.
For comparison, if they were getting the die shrinks as quickly as they were in the past, the 670/680 would have historically been the parts that they released as the Titan/780 Ti/780. The 680/670 would have historically been the 660 Ti/660.
Supposedly that is simply not sustainable anymore.
How many 4k displays are you guys running that are worried about how much VRAM these cards will have. 4gb is likely all you'll need for a long long time. But hey if you enjoy wasting money on a bigger number that likely won't help you, go for it.
How many 4k displays are you guys running that are worried about how much VRAM these cards will have. 4gb is likely all you'll need for a long long time. But hey if you enjoy wasting money on a bigger number that likely won't help you, go for it.
You're a fringe case, most people never get anywhere near that.My modded Skyrim eats over 4GB of VRAM.![]()
It is possible that the 970s will eventually feature 6gb variants?
You missed out. When everyone was dumping 290s due to Litecoin mining inefficiency, you could nab barely used ones for like $170. It was insane. You can still find them on sale (new) for pretty cheap, as low as ~$300.I understand that. But since I basically stopped following PC tech around the time I got my current card, it was never quite clear to me. I,guess in the end it all comes down to pricing. I remember buying the HD4870 at launch for 250 bucks and it was a steal. I'd buy something like an R9 290 for the same price.
Probably not since it's expected to have a 256-bit bus.
So i guess 8gb would be the most likely then, if they are starting with 4gb? Hm.
It's uncanny because it's the exact same situation, and I was in those threads posting the exact same things I am nowI feel like not only the discussion, but even the leaked pics, the leaked benchmarks, everything, is a total repeat of Kepler's launch.
It's almost uncanny.
I see your specific word choice, and I must admit, I like it.
You are 100percent right about that.If AMD take the plunge with a 20nm lineup and nice performance increases in early 2015 or so, it'll definitely leave Nvidia sidelined. For a while. The efficiency of Maxwell combined with a die shrink could ultimately leave Nvidia with the superior GPU line-up, but of course AMD can always play ball with pricing(there's no such thing as a bad card, so long as the price is right).
Neat.
Also read rumors about AMD's next generation GPU architecture after Pirate Islands, which is apparently Faraway Islands
http://wccftech.com/amds-future-gpu...ed-faraway-islands-features-20nm-coming-year/
http://www.tweaktown.com/news/39883...d-next-gen-faraway-islands-in-2015/index.html
https://semiaccurate.com/2014/08/26/amds-faraway-islands-interesting-story/
Always take with a grain of salt but, it's not unreasonable to assume AMD has several architectures in the pipeline at any one time, like Nvidia, and as per usual.
Well, games haven't really needed more horsepower thanks to consoles, aside from a few titles and effects. VRAM is more of an issue honestly.My GTX 580 from 2010 still wrecks every game out there at 1080p. It's kind of a joke how little the GPU market has progressed since then.
If AMD take the plunge with a 20nm lineup and nice performance increases in early 2015 or so, it'll definitely leave Nvidia sidelined. For a while. The efficiency of Maxwell combined with a die shrink could ultimately leave Nvidia with the superior GPU line-up, but of course AMD can always play ball with pricing(there's no such thing as a bad card, so long as the price is right).
Could be interesting.
What games have you played?My GTX 580 from 2010 still wrecks every game out there at 1080p. It's kind of a joke how little the GPU market has progressed since then.
Question is when.AMD is absolutely going to do a 20nm lineup, along with 16nm FinFET.
And so they spend less, progress slows even more, perhaps AMD even gets out of the business altogether and then I can just justify it all by saying 'that's capitalism', right?I do like to think (and this is total baseless speculation) that this price/performance stagnation will eventually reach a breaking point with consumers, then amd and nvidia get to whine about a shrinking market cutting into their revenue and it will be a self fulfilling prophecy
You missed out. When everyone was dumping 290s due to Litecoin mining inefficiency, you could nab barely used ones for like $170. It was insane. You can still find them on sale (new) for pretty cheap, as low as ~$300.
For what it's worth, the RELATIVE performance might be pretty low for, lets say, a 760 or 280X. However, what you get is a card that can run 98% of games at 1080p/120Hz. You'll probably want to be on the lookout for AMD dropping prices, or perhaps an eventual 960 Ti.
I really like the idea of a 670 pricing scheme that solves issues as serious as Climate Change and civil unrest.
Here's hoping for $300.
How many 4k displays are you guys running that are worried about how much VRAM these cards will have. 4gb is likely all you'll need for a long long time. But hey if you enjoy wasting money on a bigger number that likely won't help you, go for it.
My GTX 580 from 2010 still wrecks every game out there at 1080p. It's kind of a joke how little the GPU market has progressed since then.