Now, I'm an open red ant - and I wouldn't buy green products for my GPU needs, but how is what I've read in this thread at all a bad thing?
Ignoring the performance changes (yes I get it, node change, premiums, rah-rah-rah), I'm reading the following:
$300 part that performs like another $300 part (ie what's expected of 78xx)
$300 part that in certain scenarios can perform like a $450 part (using the lower Tahiti numbers)
$300 with <225W consumption
How is that bad at all? nVidia isn't doing anything new. From where I stand - only nVidia cards can use PhysX, only nVidia cards can use CUDA features, and now only nVidia cards can use nVidia specific optimizations.
If the above is true for a $300 part, imagine what a $500+ part can do.
All the people who were expecting a $300 part to compete with a $500+ part have to get that out of their heads, what we're seeing is something that can literally change the game. Developers might not even have to include these optimizations - it could be an NVidia profile kind of thing.
This is one of those "free performance" situations. Sure, in specific scenarios, but who cares if it acts like a $300 card 95% of the time and a $500+ card 5% of the time - that's a pretty sweet perk.