Nintendesert
Diamond Member
- Mar 28, 2010
- 7,761
- 5
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I think Charlie got exactly what he wanted, a ton of talking and controversy and lots of page hits.
And still, they can get it wrong. All companies are guilty of this. All companies make mistakes. And yes, this does indeed mean that they are not perfect, contrary to belief.
Uh, what? Not certain if serious.And so we might really know what Charlie is mulling over, maybe we should appoint somebody to ask him. Maybe Anandthenman could do the deed. After all, he is the one who correctly defined the name of Charlies web site when nobody else had a clue. I'd say that makes him the closest to the situation. I nominate. Seconds?
Didn't take long for this thread to become more about friction than fact!
A quick tour around newegg shows all the 7970's out of stock.
If anything the 7970 might be currently underpriced.
It's over-priced because it doesn't fit in their budget, duh.Yup. I don't know how anyone can argue that the 7970 is over priced when every one made is being bought.
Yup. I don't know how anyone can argue that the 7970 is over priced when every one made is being bought.
It's over-priced because it doesn't fit in their budget, duh.![]()
I know I'm not the typical high end enthusiast. I've purchased a couple $500 cards in the past. Last one was a gtx 580. Don't get me wrong it was a fantastic card but it kinda made me sick to think that $500 was tied up into my computer for playing video games. I know that will be the last high end card purchase for me. I'll let the high rollers play that game. As for me I'm waiting for a solid 50%+ upgrade from my overclocked gtx 480 for $300. It will be a while I'm sure but I can wait.
In my eyes - I don't see this price premium as outside of the normal. If it were $450, I'd be ecstatic, but it isn't and I'm not going to sit and post "it should be cheaper" in a forum of enthusiast haha.
Go Premiums!![]()
I just don't understand considering sweet spot pricing was the norm and that hammer was banging for many, many years. It's if that strategy never existed!![]()
You talk as if AMD took a solemn promise to sell their highest performing chips at $200-$300 and not a penny more.
No it wasn't. It was a commitment to the performance sectors -- where many consumers are; to redefine performance/value; to garner market share gains while still bringing in nice revenue/profit/margins.
So MSRP's percentage gains over the over-all performance percentage gains -- as normal?
AMD didn't change the smaller die to a larger die, and this die is smaller than their last one.
And didn't they do that?
And who stops them from dropping the prices of the 7970 once NVIDIA new cards arrive?
Strategy is always based on competition/enemy/rivals, etc.
Price was only part of it.
And didn't they do that?
And who stops them from dropping the prices of the 7970 once NVIDIA new cards arrive?
Strategy is always based on competition/enemy/rivals, etc.
Price was only part of it.
Why does any of that matter to me, the end user? I'm not measuring dies, I'm using a video card to enjoy my games.
If it were cheaper, I'd be happier, if it were costlier and slower I wouldn't buy it.
Buying now, what would you recommend in the $500-600 price range (since that is my budget)? Or will you tell me stories about die sizes and how it affects my games?
There it is again, this proven strategy that competition creates price wars. Glad other people realize this.
And these people who act like they care if the early adopters get shafted - just stop. They know the name of the game. We all do.
As long as you're happy that is all that matters!Just pointed out it isn't "normal" pricing to me.