One has to wonder how much they managed to wring out of a respin to justify keeping Polaris 10 as x80 series. NVIDIA's response could be downright nasty with an opening like that.
But i'm not seeing how a refreshed 1060 is going to compete with a refreshed RX 580 if the RX 580 has a considerable clock speed increase. From what i've been reading the 1060 is nearly tapped out.
They can always drop the price. NVidia never really did budge much with the 1060 pricing even when AMD cards were seeing some deep discounts with the 4GB 470 getting as low as $130. I suspect that NVidia may do just that, where the refreshed cards with faster memory take up the old $250 position and the older cards get discounted until stock runs out.
AMD releases half a GPU stack at a time and rebrands the other portion (if necessary although I believe they ALWAYS should).every freakin year the same discussions about rebrands...
Piesquared. You keep calling the 1060 rebranded. You keep being wrong.
When Gigabyte told us that AORUS series are replacing G1 Gaming, they were serious. The first three cards are from AORUS series, with XTR 8G being the highest end. It’s a custom dual-fan WindForce solution with some RGB goodness.
But as far as price dropping the 1060 to insert the 1060 at a higher price, AMD can just follow suit and lower the prices of the RX 4xx. It's already competitive so AMD could easily match NV's price drop.
At some point dropping price isn't worth it. The additional sales you can get at the lower price won't offset the reduced revenue from the lower cost. NVidia has shown that they're not that interested in cutting prices and I suspect that they won't unless AMD has a substantially better product at a lower price, which probably won't happen because if AMD has a substantially better product, they'll just charge more for it.
Ok, well i was just responding to what you said would probably happen, that NV would lower prices on the 1060. I think though that NV will have no choice but to lower prices on the 1060 when they introduce the 1060 into the market. Though that is base on the assumption that RX 580 will have a notable increase in clock speed which i suspect it will.
I meant they probably keep the 1060 price the same, but the initial version with the slower memory speed gets a slight discount and eventually . I only see them dropping price if AMD releases a significantly improved 580 at $200, which I don't see them doing. If they have a monster card, they'll price at $250+. I'm guessing a 1060 with better memory clocks doesn't scale as well as a 480 with better core clocks, but if it keeps it close enough, NVidia probably doesn't drop prices.
This seems to be a real sore spot for some reason. It must be something NV's marketing dept is desperate to avoid. Curious!
Like different memory speed 470s sharing the market (from 6.6Gbps to 8.0... or are there are 3 rebrands of 470s!), there will be various 1060s at different points. Optional 9Gbs variants will be priced the highest at equal or higher price than the RX 580 likely due to brand strength.
The only desperation is this spin. Ugh.
So you think a 1GHz mhz bandwidth increase is going to compete against a 200MHz clock increase on the RX 580 for example?
No.
But I also don't think the 580 will be 1466MHz. Did you miss that post that dissected that 1450mhz screenshot as fake?
At some point dropping price isn't worth it. The additional sales you can get at the lower price won't offset the reduced revenue from the lower cost. NVidia has shown that they're not that interested in cutting prices and I suspect that they won't unless AMD has a substantially better product at a lower price, which probably won't happen because if AMD has a substantially better product, they'll just charge more for it.
straw grasping taken to the next lvl...Nope, AMD has plenty of their own, especially when it comes to rebranding gpus. And actually, as far as the 1060 goes, something with the same name cannot, by definition, be a "rebrand". In fact it is quite the opposite. Giving better performance with the same "brand" while rebrands (both nVidia and AMD do it) are just the opposite, basically similar performance under a new name that implies a new product.
Actually, that is how AMD dropped to a historically low market share: offering rebrand after rebrand while nVidia was offering new, improved, more efficient products.
Trying to explain this concept is extremely hard.
Especially when it comes to the CPU side with Intel vs Ryzen.
AMD did this before with the 290/x vs 390/x. It's pretty obvious what to expect just by looking at their track record: http://www.guru3d.com/articles-pages/msi-radeon-r9-390x-gaming-8g-oc-review,1.html
Performance should be easy to predict: just like a good factory OC custom rx480, but this time around out of the box.