SirPauly
Diamond Member
- Apr 28, 2009
- 5,187
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It's not Jon Peddie or Mercury Research but curious to see:
http://store.steampowered.com/hwsurvey/directx/?sort=chg
http://store.steampowered.com/hwsurvey/directx/?sort=chg
Hmmm... I'm sure this couldn't have anything to do with the tone of the article:
[/I]So the author of the article owns shares of Nvidia and recommends them. The website he writes for owns shares of Berkshire Hathaway and recommends them.
I see a pattern developing here.
$200 R9 290 is even a better deal! (It's a great card really, I have one ref. heater myself)
But did it help them one iota?
We've heard this many times before:
All AMD needs to do (insert something painful, like ridic price slash)
This one is not on AMD marketing department
No one can reinvent your business, when all you have is the choice between losing market share and money,
and losing even more market share and money, or some equally unattractive combination of the two.
I agree that the R9 290 is a GREAT deal, but according to the market share information, it is not compelling enough to sway buyers.
Marketing is MORE than pricing. Pricing helps you, but marketing transcends pricing (good or bad). Sometimes being cheap is actually counter-productive in marketing...
It's barely beating AMD's last gen. A poor comparison imo.
It's nearly twice as fast as AMD's latest GPU Tongo while using even less power.
The reason why this is not like Conroe lies in the possibility to push the power consumption through the roof.
I didn't compare the price. Which doesnt make sense anyway.
I used Tongo because it is AMDs latest GPU architecture. And yet Maxwell offers more performance while using around 30W less power. It is like Conroe from an architecture standpoint.
The bottom line is, consumers are stupid. Yes I said it, consumers buy what they think is the best not what is the best. Sometimes the two are the same, often they are not. Branding trumps actual product merits and value, this is not the fault of Nvidia the blame lays right at the feet of AMD. As a company they never grasped the critical importance of building the brand.
Nvidia has achieved the coveted status of having their loyal customers sell product for them, it's a curious phenomenon in the consumer space. People become disciples for lack of a better word and champion (as well as purchase) the same brands over and over again. It will take a truly terrible run of said product for people to get fed up and switch, and even if they do if the next product cycle turns out to be good they will switch back.
What does this have to do with marketshare? Well everything, AMD has never been rewarded solely based on product and has been punished disproportionately. I've said it before I think we are finally seeing the end of AMD as we know it, enjoy your $900 mid range GPUs. Hopefully another competitor will step in and fill the void or maybe AMD will get bought out by a company that has some marketing sense.
I didn't compare the price. Which doesnt make sense anyway.
I used Tongo because it is AMDs latest GPU architecture. And yet Maxwell offers more performance while using around 30W less power. It is like Conroe from an architecture standpoint.
Why are people talking about the AMD price cuts on the 290s not exciting people based on stats from July-September 2014?
It's barely beating AMD's last gen. A poor comparison imo.
AMD's x2 processor were overpriced like nothing. What was the price of the FX? $1000?
On the other hand we can use the GTX970: As fast as the 290X, nearly half the power consumption and around $200 cheaper at launch. Sounds like Conroe, huh...
Hmmm 20% faster, 15% smaller, 90% more efficient, better overclocking headroom, 1 billion less transistors, and all on the same node. If that's barely beating, then slap a wig on my head and call me Sally. Even Fermi wasn't as bad off vs. Evergreen or Cayman as Hawaii and Tonga are vs. Maxwell.
AMD is losing on every single metric except price. If your product is 85% as good as the competition's, but costs 10% more to make and you also have to sell it for 20% less the competition, that is an absolutely horrible position to be in. More expensive to make, more expensive power delivery, sell for less, which means AMD is losing on profit and money left over for R&D. And according to these results, their selling less cards AND making less money on each card. How does AMD stop this cycle? If Fiji isn't noticeably better all around in every measurable regard (in both performance metrics and cost metrics) than Maxwell, I truly believe it might be the last discrete GPU cycle we'll see out of AMD.
LOL! Last discrete GPU cycle? The FUD is strong with this thread.
But notice the drop-off in Q2 2014 though -- AMD is world class, fierce and very strong competitors that bring compelling choice. Just one misstep from nVidia could dramatically change this current landscape or Amd may surprise with a technology marvel.
There's no way you actually believe this. Nvidia had a massive misstep with Fermi and easily recovered, no way Nvidia makes another Fermi like blunder. Put another way, did YOU buy an AMD card when Fermi was a no show? No you didn't you waited and in fact bought a Fermi GPU IIRC.Just one misstep from nVidia could dramatically change this current landscape or Amd may surprise with a technology marvel.
