Anyone else annoyed with so many incremental video cards on the market?

Golgatha

Lifer
Jul 18, 2003
12,395
1,067
126
It just seems silly to me anymore how many versions of the same thing are available. There seems to be a video card for every +$20 price point from $50 to $500 on the market. Most of the lineup from ATI and nVidia between the "good" cards just aren't worth the extra money. Also, whoever thought a 256MB 6200 was a good marketing tool, needs to be flogged for taking advantage of unknowledgeable consumers.

Same thing goes for CPUs really while I'm on a rant. Everything is incremental anymore and it's really making me jaded enough to use a next-gen console for most of my gaming needs since you can now easily take them Online.


What annoys you most about the current state of PC hardware?
 

Hacp

Lifer
Jun 8, 2005
13,923
2
81
For CPu- Overclock

FOr GPU, good Nvidia chips are

6600 DDR2
6800GS
7800GT


FOr ATI good chips are...
X800GTO(unlockable version)
 

dug777

Lifer
Oct 13, 2004
24,778
4
0
when i saw there was a 512mb 6200, i threw a chair at my grandmother i was so annoyed :Q









(i have to admit i bought one :eek:, but when it turned out not to unlock, and wouldn't overclock to save it's life i took it back and got a 9550, which hits 9600XT speeds no worries)
 

SickBeast

Lifer
Jul 21, 2000
14,377
19
81
Originally posted by: Golgatha
What annoys you most about the current state of PC hardware?

Certainly the lack of competition on the CPU end. Graphics cards have been gaining enormous power ever since ATI and nVidia started competing so fiercely a few years back when the R9700Pro came out. Heck, even the R8500/GF3/GF4 was a fierce battle; far more fierce than anything we have seen from AMD/intel in the past 5 years (well, since the Athlon/P3 days).

I don't think it makes much sense to complain about the plethora of choices we have on the videocard market tho. You just need to research what you're buying. It occasionally produces overclocking gems like the X800GTO2.
 

n7

Elite Member
Jan 4, 2004
21,281
4
81
What annoys me is that the 7800GTX 512 MB is $850 Cdn. :|

The manufacturers of this BS certainly are making video cards a ton better than they used to be, but that doesn't mean they should be allowed to charge infinitely more for each new generation.

If that's how everything worked, a PC these days would cost $25,000.
Yet somehow they are cheaper than ever.

Hard drives get bigger & cheaper, so does RAM, so do optical drives.

CPUs & video cards are becoming ridiculously expensive though...

I don't quite get how certain hardware components become such a better deal over time, & other get more & more expensive :|

 

Chacranajxy

Member
Oct 18, 2005
142
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Eh... I actually like the incremental video cards. There's something that WILL cater to you based on how much you're willing to spend. The money you put in is rewarded with an accordingly powerful video card.
 

gac009

Senior member
Jun 10, 2005
403
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Originally posted by: n7
What annoys me is that the 7800GTX 512 MB is $850 Cdn. :|

The manufacturers of this BS certainly are making video cards a ton better than they used to be, but that doesn't mean they should be allowed to charge infinitely more for each new generation.

If that's how everything worked, a PC these days would cost $25,000.
Yet somehow they are cheaper than ever.

Hard drives get bigger & cheaper, so does RAM, so do optical drives.

CPUs & video cards are becoming ridiculously expensive though...

I don't quite get how certain hardware components become such a better deal over time, & other get more & more expensive :|

Diminishing returns of current tech = Expensive GPUs/CPUs with only small jumps in progress.
 

n7

Elite Member
Jan 4, 2004
21,281
4
81
So you're saying they aren't making money off CPUs/GPUs?

I'd say that's far from the truth...
 

Hacp

Lifer
Jun 8, 2005
13,923
2
81
Originally posted by: n7
So you're saying they aren't making money off CPUs/GPUs?

I'd say that's far from the truth...


There making more than enough off of you :)
 

nitromullet

Diamond Member
Jan 7, 2004
9,031
36
91
CPUs & video cards are becoming ridiculously expensive though...

Only for the top end stuff. Sure, you should expect to pay a lot for an Athlon 64 FX-57 paired with a 7800 GTX 512MB... On the otherhand, you can build a great gaming rig with an Athlon 64 3500+ and a 7800GT for less than you'd pay for either of the aforementioned components that will pretty much smoke any rig that was out a year ago, except for maybe a 6800GT/Ultra SLI setup.

Back OT.... I personally like all the choices, but you really have to do your research before you buy. Then again, that is pretty much true with anything.
 

SickBeast

Lifer
Jul 21, 2000
14,377
19
81
Originally posted by: n7
What annoys me is that the 7800GTX 512 MB is $850 Cdn. :|

The manufacturers of this BS certainly are making video cards a ton better than they used to be, but that doesn't mean they should be allowed to charge infinitely more for each new generation.

If that's how everything worked, a PC these days would cost $25,000.
Yet somehow they are cheaper than ever.

Hard drives get bigger & cheaper, so does RAM, so do optical drives.

CPUs & video cards are becoming ridiculously expensive though...

I don't quite get how certain hardware components become such a better deal over time, & other get more & more expensive :|

Well, AMD raised prices on the CPU end, and the relentless graphics war has forced ATI/nVidia to raise their high end prices. The parts are extremely complex; it's not like you don't get your money's worth. Compare price/performance between a low end and a high end card; they're usually about the same.
 

n7

Elite Member
Jan 4, 2004
21,281
4
81
See, i knew someone would come along & say only top end costs alot, but that's not true either.

A 7800GT is still just under $500 Cdn., & unless i'm going crazy, i'm pretty sure we could get the top end cards for that price a few years ago.

Now $500 only gets me lower top end.

Even a mid range card like an X800XL or 6800GT/GS is still $300-450 Cdn., which is still way more expensive than mid range card used to be.

Dual core CPU pricing is just silly too, especially for anything above lower end, but that i don't mind quite as much due to OCing.

Still though, these are things that really can only explained as manufacturer greed, or perhaps price-fixing amongst companies IMO.
 

tyborg

Member
Sep 14, 2004
155
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yeah. but the higher you go, the less you get what you pay for. the 7800 GTX 512 is a perfect example.
 

n7

Elite Member
Jan 4, 2004
21,281
4
81
Originally posted by: SickBeast
...and the relentless graphics war has forced ATI/nVidia to raise their high end prices. The parts are extremely complex; it's not like you don't get your money's worth. Compare price/performance between a low end and a high end card; they're usually about the same.

That's the wrong logic though.

If there was actually a relentless war, then prices should be going down, not up, since both manufacturers would be battling for your money

Yet it seems both companies always price their cards very closely, & each new gen keeps costing more than the next.

Sorry to say, but that is the opposite of what would happen if there actually was a war for our money going on.

Now i do understand these new video cards are insanely more powerful than the last ones, & with heaps more features, but they are still charging wayyyy more than it cost them to make these.

From what i can see, it looks like there is some behind the scenes cooperation with ATi & nVidia working to scam us all, but of course, i'm gonna be ridiculed for thinking such a crazy thought.

Also, i have a little first hand experience with knowing actual video card's cost for a store, since i work in retail.
I know there is a disgusting amount of markup on what the stores sells it for vs. what they paid for it, & how 'bout ATi/nVidia retail employee/staff pricing? (I've bought a few cards that way)
I know they wouldn't sell them to us employees for less than what it cost them to make, which only goes farther to confirm my suspicions, since for example, i got my X850XT PE for about $200+ less than what everyone sold it for.


Think about it though. It makes a lot of sense.





/sorry about this off topic rant, just had to let loose for once...

 

Munky

Diamond Member
Feb 5, 2005
9,372
0
76
The top of the line stuff is never a good bang for the buck. The 512 gtx cost 4x the price of my card, but it sure as hell does not give you 4x the performance, probably not even 2x in most cases. Also, the OCZ VX gold is not worth the extra money over value ram, but since it does not become obsolete in a matter of months, I felt like getting it anyways. The A64 3000 can also be overclocked to FX55 levels for a much lower price.

There are those people who will buy the latest and greatest for outrageous prices, but there's nothing like getting the performance of a $2000 rig from a $1000 system.
 

jiffylube1024

Diamond Member
Feb 17, 2002
7,430
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Originally posted by: n7
CPUs & video cards are becoming ridiculously expensive though...

At least with CPUs you can overclock (although they are still skimming the market with Dual core).

GPU's are just annoying because you can't overclock them that much, and you can't overclock extra pipelines out of your card. Plus unlockable cards usually only have one quad you can unlock, meaning you'll get a 12 pipe card to 16 pipes but don't expect a 6600GT to run like a 7800GTX, which is essentially what you're doing when you run a 3000+ @ 2.7 Ghz ;) .
 

HamburgerBoy

Lifer
Apr 12, 2004
27,111
318
126
Originally posted by: Chacranajxy
Eh... I actually like the incremental video cards. There's something that WILL cater to you based on how much you're willing to spend. The money you put in is rewarded with an accordingly powerful video card.

Exactly. I like cards within the $150 to $200 range, and the more options the higher chance of me getting the best possible bang for my buck.
 

Matthias99

Diamond Member
Oct 7, 2003
8,808
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Originally posted by: n7
See, i knew someone would come along & say only top end costs alot, but that's not true either.

A 7800GT is still just under $500 Cdn., & unless i'm going crazy, i'm pretty sure we could get the top end cards for that price a few years ago.

Now $500 only gets me lower top end.

Even a mid range card like an X800XL or 6800GT/GS is still $300-450 Cdn., which is still way more expensive than mid range card used to be.

Prior to roughly the GF4/R9XXX timeframe, what basically happened each generation was that the new 'low-end' card took over what had previously been the midrange performance area, the new 'mid-range' card performed a lot like the old 'high-end', and the new 'high-end' card was faster than anything ever seen before. But prices didn't really go up (much); the new low-end card usually cost about the same as the old 'low-end' card, and the performance spread between the high- and low-end cards was generally pretty stable.

There's been an interesting phenomenon in the last few generations of video cards, though -- effectively, there is a price floor at somewhere around $50-75 for new cards from ATI/NVIDIA (I would say due largely to the expense of R&D and manufacturing these days, although there may be some implicit collusion here to avoid getting into price wars at the low end). And the bottom end cards haven't really been getting that much faster -- but the high-end cards have been steadily and significantly increasing in speed. This means that, to maintain anything resembling the same price/performance, prices for high-end cards have been getting higher and higher over the last few years. Basically, the performance gap between the high- and low-end cards has been growing, and ATI/NVIDIA are either unwilling or unable to drop prices on the low-end cards. And it doesn't make a ton of sense to sell something around the speed of a 6800GS as the 'low-end' part (which is basically what we'd be doing if we were still following the old model of development/replacement).

However, price/performance at every pricepoint has gotten better over the last few generations. I paid $275 for a refurb 9800Pro (admittedly, a really nice Sapphire 'Ultimate' model) a few years ago; right now, I could almost buy a new 7800GT for that price, and that card would stomp my 9800Pro flat. $500 a year or so ago would have just about bought you a 512MB 6800U; now you can get a significantly better-performing 7800GTX for around $450. Price/performance has gotten better -- but performance is increasing a lot, and so prices have also gone up.

Dual core CPU pricing is just silly too, especially for anything above lower end, but that i don't mind quite as much due to OCing.

:confused:

Price/performance on super-high-end CPUs makes ANYTHING in the videocard market look like a good deal. That 512MB 7800GTX might cost $650, but at least it performs ~20% better than the $500 cards (which is almost linear price/performance). An FX-57 (2.8Ghz/1MB cache) costs almost eight times as much as an A64 3000+ (1.8Ghz/512KB cache), and it's only about 50-60% faster. That's a horrible deal any way you look at it.

Now i do understand these new video cards are insanely more powerful than the last ones, & with heaps more features, but they are still charging wayyyy more than it cost them to make these.

R&D is *incredibly* expensive for 300+ million-transistor processor cores, and manufacturing them is not cheap or easy. The PCBs for modern high-end video cards can rival a motherboard from a few years back in terms of complexity and trace count. And that high-end graphics memory isn't cheap either. Granted, there is still a lot of profit (especially at the high end), but there was also a lot of money put in before the cards ever hit the market.

From what i can see, it looks like there is some behind the scenes cooperation with ATi & nVidia working to scam us all, but of course, i'm gonna be ridiculed for thinking such a crazy thought.

Given that price/performance has still been increasing steadily (even while overall prices have gone up at the high end), and ATI and NVIDIA seem to have pretty fast price reductions when competitive products are available, I find it unlikely that they are explicitly colluding in any meaningful way. I think this is something that people should be aware of, though, since the possibility is there.

However, the fact that we basically have a 2-company oligarchy in high-performance 3D graphics means there is a lot of room for implicit collusion (that is, both companies realizing independently that it is in their best interest not to compete as hard as possible, at least in certain market segments). They're pretty vicious at the top end, but neither company has made huge efforts at cutting prices near the bottom of the graphics card food chain. And the reports that NVIDIA was basically ready months ago and held back the 7800GTX"Ultra" until the X1800XT launched are a little disconcerting. It implies that they're willing to sit on better products if they think it would hurt their profit margins to release them earlier. But I guess that's sort of inevitable when there are only two major players and one of them feels they have the upper hand.
 

AnnoyedGrunt

Senior member
Jan 31, 2004
596
25
81
CPU performance seems adequate for almost all "normal" tasks. That, in combination with the technical difficulties of improving speed, makes the relative stagnation in the CPU area both understandable and somewhat good IMO. I like the fact that my A64 3200+ is now 7 months old and is still plenty fast for pretty much everything (games in particular).

GPU overall performance seems to be increasing, but when you compare performance/price, it has also seemed somewhat stagnant. It seems like until very recently, the 9800pro from 2 years ago was still a realatively good buy for $200. I guess the card was closer to $300 two years ago, but the dramatic improvement at the high end seemed to have taken quite some time to filter down to the more moderately priced offerings. It seems that the 6800GS is the first real breakthru in $200 performance since the 9700/9800 cards. The 6600GT was only a very slight improvement over the 9800pro, and the X800XL was much more expensive, so it took quite a while for that card to knocked down. The 7800GT seems to be doing well, and when it gets down to $300 then it'll be a pretty good jump over the X800XL @ $300 (only 1 year ago). So maybe the trend of high performance trickling down will speed back up again more quickly than in the last year.

I think the only thing that really gets me annoyed, is the crappy video cards with 256 MB of RAM. It annoys me because it really seems to be a way to take advantage of the less informed consumer, and get them to pay more for something they don't really need. Back when ATI was first announcing the X1XX line, I remember that each 256 MB card was competing with a 125 MB card with a better GPU at the same price point. In every situation, the card with 125 MB was loads faster than the one with 256. To me, that's a disservice to the customer.

-D'oh!
 

BespinReactorShaft

Diamond Member
Jun 9, 2004
3,190
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Bearing in mind that at the end of the day it's up to the buyer to do his/her homework before sinking in the $$, the variety is very much welcome IMO.

Originally posted by: munky
The top of the line stuff is never a good bang for the buck. The 512 gtx cost 4x the price of my card, but it sure as hell does not give you 4x the performance, probably not even 2x in most cases.

That's my rationale for skipping a generation or two when upgrading. I'm sure I'm not the first to speculate on whether companies can already offer 2x-4x the performance of the previous generation cards, but they're just holding it back and milking consumers for all they're worth in the meantime. Or it could really be that point of diminishing returns thing kicking in. Or both. /shrug