Out of curiosity. Did anyone ever managed to figure out which press briefing the article is referring to? I don't trust anything on the internet right now, especially not with regards to consoles, and a rather short article from a (very) unknown indian tech-site doesn't really paint a picture of trustworthyness.
This is the only AMD press briefing that took place in January:
Here is an article about that briefing:
"All of us need a thriving Radeon GPU ecosystem. So, are we going after 4K, and going to similarly disrupt 4K? Absolutely."
www.pcgamesn.com
You will find that OP's source just took pieces and turned them into something else. The true article from that event focuses on Chandrasekhar saying that 4K is not relevant yet in PC gaming and they will focus on that when adoption is higher. OP's source writes something comparable, that raytracing adoption is not there yet, so AMD doesn't see the need to support it yet (which if you think about it is complete BS, because 4K adoption on PC is slow because there are barely any displays, while raytracing adoption is slow because there aren't enough cards that have it, so only AMD could increase adoption).
“With the Radeon 5000-series we are essentially covering 90-something-percent of the total PC gamers today,” says Chandrasekhar. “And so that’s the reason why no 4K right now, it’s because the vast majority of them are at 1440p and 1080p.
If he had said anything about raytracing at the same event, you bet at least one more outlet would have picked up on it. I can give you one more:
“Just like in Ryzen, we need an improved market in Radeon. Will we provide 4K support in this series? You can absolutely count on that. But that’s all I can say now. ”
AMD plans to shake the 4K sector just like the Ryzen success with the Big Navi graphics card. The video card, which will be released in 2020, will be much
www.somagnews.com
Same event. If he can't even go into detail about the 4K plans for Big Navi, you bet he didn't talk about its raytracing design.