RussianSensation
Elite Member
- Sep 5, 2003
- 19,458
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The one thought that keeps running through my head is- if AMD has such highly binned GPUs then why isn't the Fury Nano the Fury Mobile instead (aka a laptop GPU)? Seems like where they are weakest is in laptops, they don't have any way of milking that "daddy is buying me a gaming laptop for college" market.
1. Look at the small supply of Fiji XT cards. It's going to be hard to get any major OEM selling high-end gaming notebooks accept a mobile Fiji XT GPU with $400-$650 upgrade cost in a pre-built gaming laptop without having a steady supply.
2. 175W TDP is still way too high for a gaming laptop. They'd need to get it down to at least 125W.
What they really needed is a 350-425mm2 HBM2 GPU to go into laptops but I guess they have no money to design that alongside with Fiji. After all, if they did, they wouldn't have released R9 390/390X either as this 350-425mm2 mid-tier HBM1 chip would have replaced R9 390 cards.
With their limited budget, it looks like they are putting all their eggs into the 16nm basket. It is a risky strategy because they will be giving up a lot of market share over the next 3-4 quarters until 16nm HBM2 GPUs show up. Another risk is that their 16nm GPUs may not be as good as Pascal so this strategy would backfire and they will have lost 4 quarters of potential sales.
If this thing was green and called a Titan Nano, ppl would call it the next best thing to sliced bread.
It's coming - and it'll be a Pascal product.

But anything AMD does first, is always downplayed. GDDR5 first -> downplayed, HBM1 first -> downplayed, whenever AMD cards have more VRAM (HD6950/6970/7970/290X) -> downplayed.
Remember how GTX970 SLI/980 SLI had sufficient VRAM for 9 months but once 980TI came out, 4GB HBM1 is a bottleneck.
The 290X was never 300$ here, specially not in september 2014.
Most of us don't live in Denmark. I could quote prices in Russia, UK or Canada every day but it's of no use to AT's large userbase. You should know better given who most of the posters are on this forum. Not to mention, even when posters in the US would be building rigs, not once did I see you recommend R9 290/290X/R9 295X2, not once.
I have no problem recommending the superior NV card when it is.
The point is you have ignored R9 290/290X/R9 295X2's awesome price/performance in the US/Canada for their entire generation, even when R9 290 was on sale for $400 vs. GTX780 for $650 and after 780's price drop to $500. So really, you can wiggle your point all you want but even if R9 290 was $99, you wouldn't have recommended it.
Just like now you still do not ever recommend $220 R9 290 cards vs. GTX960/970. You simply do not recommend any AMD products and I bet almost anything you've never owned any AMD/ATI videocard.
I guarantee it if the Nano cost $329, you'd say "Oh it's too late since miniITX 970 has been available for a year." If the Nano was $229, you'd say "Oh it doesn't have HDMI 2.0" so it's worthless as an HTPC. If the Nano was $129, you'd say "wow AMD is desperate, too dangerous to buy their products as I don't believe they'll survive to 2017 and there will be no driver support." I guarantee it no matter what AMD makes, you'll always find something wrong with it.
I bet if tomorrow a Fury Nano fell out of the truck on the street and you had a choice of taking it for free but you could never resell it, gift it or otherwise, you wouldn't put it in your system. I bet you are one of those GeForce 5 and GeForce 7 owners, am I right?
For ITX you want a blower card or something similar that puts the heat outside the case.
Nano's cooler should allow 40-50% of the heat being exhausted out of the case. Are you implying 105W of the other heat that is dumped into the case would be too much for a miniITX rig to handle? Do you have proof of that?
As I already said, all it takes is 1-2 miniITX rigs with a Nano to prove you wrong that a miniITX rig needs a blower.
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