So back to the argument that 'code name' means anything. It doesn't.
Is this a joke?
So back to the argument that 'code name' means anything. It doesn't.
So back to the argument that 'code name' means anything. It doesn't.
Using your logic, if Nvidia were to release a GP107 (same numbers as a 750/750Ti) that was 4mm2 and performed twice as fast as a 980 Ti, it would be a ripoff at $500 right?
Because the 107 means it's a low end card that should be $100-$150, right?
How about no.
I've been saying the same thing. Just like when AMD went from 5870 being high end, to the 6870 being not the high end
Those aren't code names. Everyone here should expect marketing names to be total unreliable junk. Code names are less likely to be pure marketing smoke and mirrors because they are the names the actual engineers and internal business folk use to refer to the product. The code names of those two products were Cypress and Barts.
You missed my point, which was that the x80 nomenclature is no longer Nvidia's flagship name, just like when AMD downgraded the x870 to non-flagship status.
We agree. The conclusion then is if the first-released x80 product is not the flagship, then it shouldn't be priced like a flagship.
We do agree, but
1) You didn't finish reading my bolded statement. The last sentence, specifically. If you need me to elaborate more, I can.
2) If you think $500-550 is flagship pricing now, LOL! Both AMD and Nvidia moved that curve up long ago (AMD more recently). In fact, Nvidia spoiled AMD from raising their price ceiling more. You best be wait'in for them thare price drops in tha future!
"At the very high end the GTX 980 will be unrivaled."
"Due to circumstances largely out of its control, Nvidia has had to go ahead with a 28nm high-end Maxwell part instead, dubbed GM204. "
"Since Nvidia gave us a taste of Maxwell weve been eagerly awaiting that high-end variant and thats exactly what we get today with the GTX 980s launch. "
"It has taken a while for Maxwell to make the leap into the high-end space, but now we have the GeForce GTX 980 and 970 which replace the Kepler-based top-end models of the previous GTX 7xx series. "
"Nvidia GeForce GTX 980 & GTX 970 Review: First High-End Maxwell GPUs Arrive"
For a card to remain the performance king for nearly a year and a half is unparalleled.
I don't mind. If it's more powerful than the previous, $650 for a flagship doesn't bother me. I work closely enough to hardware engineers that I understand every successive drop in nodes and increase in performance takes a lot more R&D. This silicon cow isn't giving up the goods as easily so it will cost to continue progressing.
This is the only place I hear people saying the 980 isn't or wasn't high end.
However, Russian, while I agree with some of your arguments, you always skip over the biggest fact that at the time when GTX 980 came out, it was a compelling product in and of itself at it's price.
I think the performance of the card is what matters if we can call a card a true flagship or not but RS has a valid point here.I remember when 780Ti launched NV advertised it as a successor to 580 with 80% more performance so yeah I think internally NV thinks like that as well![]()
Notice how the 500 series all was mashed into high end? on a full X10 codename? Nvidia does what it want. #Dealwithit
You're the one that put them all in the high end category dude... that proves exactly nothing. Unless you've got some source to show nVidia considered 560 Ti high end I dont buy it.
Is this a joke?
Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. announced on Thursday that it had started volume production of chips using its 16nm FinFET manufacturing technology in the second quarter of 2015. The world’s largest contract maker of semiconductors is delivering the first batch of products made at 16nm node to its customers right now, according to chief executive of TSMC. The high-volume ramp of 16nm FinFET tech begins this quarter, on-track with expectations.
Well-connected analyst Ming-Chi Kuo of KGI Securities issued a note to investors on Wednesday, a copy of which was obtained by AppleInsider, revealing that Apple has apparently made what he called a "last-minute decision to recruit TSMC." Apple is said to have called an audible after partner GlobalFoundries continued to experience poor yield rates on production of the next-generation CPU.
Specifically, GlobalFoundries' "A9" chip yield rate is said to currently be at about 30 percent yield rate, which is well below what Kuo said is a mass-production "basic requirement" of 50 percent.
Is this ff+ or just plain ff?
Edit: article doesn't say.
TSMCs 16nm FinFET (CLN16FF), 16nm FinFET+ (CLN16FF+) and 16nm FinFET compact (CLN16FFC) fabrication...
Is this ff+ or just plain ff?
Edit: article doesn't say.
