We won't know until the 14th or the 15th. They probably will be more powerful than we speculate but as far as worth it, that's debatable considering the price has rtx baked in there.Haven't been following the countless posts and updates. I was just wondering though, are these things worth $1300 yet?
Haven't been following the countless posts and updates. I was just wondering though, are these things worth $1300 yet?
We won't know until there are independent benchmarks and/or reviews. But I find it unlikely that any gaming graphics card could be worth $1300.Haven't been following the countless posts and updates. I was just wondering though, are these things worth $1300 yet?
Well, there are 7.2 billion idiots on this planet. Chances are some of them have a lot of money.Watched the video of the Bugatti Devo reveal today. All 40 units were sold before any customer even saw it - that's 5 million a pop - and suddenly the Ti doesn't look so expensive anymore![]()
Haven't been following the countless posts and updates. I was just wondering though, are these things worth $1300 yet?
I think it's important to look at the history of Nvidia's GPUs to see just how out of control the pricing has gotten here.
Fermi: GTX 560 Ti (full GF114) - $249 MSRP
Kepler: GTX 680 (full GK104) - $499 MSRP
Maxwell: GTX 980 (full GM204) - $549 MSRP
Pascal: GTX 1080 (full GP104) - $599 MSRP
Turing: RTX 2080 (cut TU104) - $699 MSRP
Nvidia has inflated the numbering and prices on its second-tier (4-series) GPUs, to the point that they are selling what should be a $249 video card for $699. And we now don't even get the full chip!
You people keep bringing up these inconvenient facts in your posts. It's really frustrating for me to handle.I think it's important to look at the history of Nvidia's GPUs to see just how out of control the pricing has gotten here.
Fermi: GTX 560 Ti (full GF114) - $249 MSRP
Kepler: GTX 680 (full GK104) - $499 MSRP
Maxwell: GTX 980 (full GM204) - $549 MSRP
Pascal: GTX 1080 (full GP104) - $599 MSRP
Turing: RTX 2080 (cut TU104) - $699 MSRP
Nvidia has inflated the numbering and prices on its second-tier (4-series) GPUs, to the point that they are selling what should be a $249 video card for $699. And we now don't even get the full chip!
The thing that concerns me is 7nm pricing. It won't be any better if AMD doesn't come up with something. Part of me wants to ask Nvidia, "Hey, what about us Ti buyers who want an upgrade at the same price range?". I'd expect Nvidia to tell Ti buyers to either pay the $1300 or settle for the X80 class for $800. If we still don't like it we can pound sand and buy a Switch or something.
I honestly expect Nvidia to actually tell their "old" customers to go straight to hell with their $700 Ti expectations. Nvidia has enough people in the $1000+ category to more than make up for it. So, I am learning they don't actually need traditional high end gamers and aren't interested in selling us product anymore. They have to realize we won't settle for an X80 class at the same price point. I simply won't buy it and I am confident a lot of others won't either. They will lose the traditional high end gamer customers who aren't willing to either pay way more money or settle for a lesser product for the same money.
Seriously. If Starbucks suddenly raised the price of a frap to $12.00 and a regular iced coffee to $8.00, I wouldn't sit there and rationalize why it might be worth it still. I wouldn't consider anything about it. I'd simply not buy the product, lol. This will be just as easy for me. I'll chuck the whole hobby to the curb with prices like this. No problem. I tap out, easy.
All semantics. The end result can be seen in the margins. We will know next quarter who was wrong and who was right.I selected your post because it sums up the cost debate in its entirety, so it's not a direct reply to you alone.
It appears that by keeping the names the same Nvidia created this illusion of price hikes. If they'd named the Ti ultra/extreme/whatever no one would be having this idea; they'd know they'd be buying Titan class performance.
The fact they launched the Ti at launch, and it being TU102 are dead giveaways that in the past this would be named Titan.
One could say what's in a name, but this is a perfect example of how much a name can do to customers.
The internet seems devided between those who are aware of the above and those who only look at the name. No offence to anyone, just an observation.
The least that Nvidia could have done is explain the current segments plus naming. Better would've been to have had new naming schemes.
Die area costs, have gotten more expensive over time, at MUCH higher rate than inflation, and bigger dies cost much more than smaller ones, and the rate of increase of cost to die size, is greater than linear.
GP104 is ~300mm2 die, while TU104 is ~500mm2.
Also in case you haven't noticed we have had a run on RAM pricing, and GDDR6 is the hot new specialty ram that will have premium pricing.
Pricing hasn't got out of control, but things that cost more to produce are going to cost more to buy.
What you never include in your examples is the time frame, 16nm wafer price in 2016 in not the same as in 2018. So TU104 may be 500mm2 but the wafer price of 12nm in 2018 is lower than 16nm wafer price in 2016.
And dont say that 12nm is a new node because its not, its just an enhanced 16nm with same rules but a little higher density than 16nm. So today, 500mm2 dies at 12nm are not more expensive than 300mm2 16nm dies back in 2016.![]()
Die area costs, have gotten more expensive over time, at MUCH higher rate than inflation, and bigger dies cost much more than smaller ones, and the rate of increase of cost to die size, is greater than linear.
first 3d mark results
RTX2080 6% faster than reference 1080TI.AIB 1080TI is slightly faster than rtx 2080
https://videocardz.com/77763/nvidia-geforce-rtx-2080-3dmark-timespy-result-leaks-out
If this were "precisely" the same lineup as mk1 Pascal had, including the Titan price point, then 2080 MSRP would be $599 and 2070 would be $379. The "Turing Titan" in "2080Ti" clothing is pulling all prices up.Sorry but no. What you're seeing here is precisely the same line up as mk1 Pascal had.
It's not the naming that's the problem, it's the specs that come with that naming and how they relate to previous gen hardware that's still on the shelves. To illustrate, if we take the jump in performance the 1070 had to offer relative to 980Ti (stock vs. stock it was around 15% faster) and we apply it to the new Turing lineup... then it's not the 2070 that needs favorably compare vs. the 1080Ti, it is.... hold on... the 2060. That's what this naming offset means.
This is the real disconnect that creates all the friction: the weird angle in which we look at the 2080Ti as a Titan class card (to justify pricing) but then turn around and compare 2070 to 1080Ti (to justify performance).
If this were "precisely" the same lineup as mk1 Pascal had, including the Titan price point, then 2080 MSRP would be $599 and 2070 would be $379. The "Turing Titan" in "2080Ti" clothing is pulling all prices up.
