DominionSeraph
Diamond Member
- Jul 22, 2009
- 8,386
- 32
- 91
July 2010: Nvidia drops their midrange GF104 at $200 and $230 in a blatent challenge to the price-gouged 5770 at $180. GF100 is sitting at $500 and $350.
Over the next 6 months the prices of GTX 460 and 5770 plummet, hitting the point where you could grab a 768MB/1GB GTX 460 for $90/110 in January 2011.
Same month Sandy Bridge drops with its HD 3000 graphics.
GTX 460 price rebounds to $130/160. 5770 for ~$100, and they park there.
2012: Ivy drops with HD4000. The midrange GK104 drops at... $500.
2013: High end GK110 drops at $1000. One year after the GTX 680 we get a cut-down GK104 at $250.
2014: Haswell drops with HD5200 available. Titan Z drops at... $3000. GTX 760 is still sitting at $250, and two years after launch Nvidia is still getting $320+ out of the GK104 in the GTX 770.
Wow, those integrated graphics have certainly undercut the dGPU market. Makes me want to break out my change purse to give Nvidia a pity purchase of a Titan Z, they're struggling so.
Over the next 6 months the prices of GTX 460 and 5770 plummet, hitting the point where you could grab a 768MB/1GB GTX 460 for $90/110 in January 2011.
Same month Sandy Bridge drops with its HD 3000 graphics.
GTX 460 price rebounds to $130/160. 5770 for ~$100, and they park there.
2012: Ivy drops with HD4000. The midrange GK104 drops at... $500.
2013: High end GK110 drops at $1000. One year after the GTX 680 we get a cut-down GK104 at $250.
2014: Haswell drops with HD5200 available. Titan Z drops at... $3000. GTX 760 is still sitting at $250, and two years after launch Nvidia is still getting $320+ out of the GK104 in the GTX 770.
Wow, those integrated graphics have certainly undercut the dGPU market. Makes me want to break out my change purse to give Nvidia a pity purchase of a Titan Z, they're struggling so.