Yotsugi
Golden Member
Memory requirements would go off the charts so no, not soon if ever.If anything I expect Ampere to double down on RT.
It's gonna be very gradual and very limited adoption even with stuff being in consoles.
Memory requirements would go off the charts so no, not soon if ever.If anything I expect Ampere to double down on RT.
Nah, the wafers themselves are plentiful, AMD is just fulfilling better than expected Rome demand so Wall St. doesn't roast them the next ER.There are definite 7nm supply issues
They just went for cheaper SS wafers and here we are.For Nvidia, given the much larger number of cards they sell, not going 7nm was probably a smart move.
With the consoles having HW RT, there's no going back now. If anything I expect Ampere to double down on RT.
And Navi too, not to mention all the other 7nm capacity used by Apple, Qualcomm and Huawei.AMD is just fulfilling better than expected Rome demand
I've already said muh wafers isn't a thing, there's enough for everyone.And Navi too, not to mention all the other 7nm capacity used by Apple, Qualcomm and Huawei.
Are you implying a production capacity bottleneck at AMD itself?AMD is just a but busy selling Rome.
Somebody has to buy wafers first. AMD does not have infinite pockets.Are you implying a production capacity bottleneck at AMD itself?
Because if wafers from TSMC aren't the bottleneck, and demand is there (which is almost certainly is now), there really isn't another explanation....
I guess that is a bottleneck of its own.Somebody has to buy wafers first. AMD does not have infinite pockets.
I'm fairly certain that getting funds for wafers is not the issue. It's not as if the world is short of either capital or satisfied with available yields.Somebody has to buy wafers first. AMD does not have infinite pockets.
With the consoles having HW RT, there's no going back now. If anything I expect Ampere to double down on RT.
How would that stop x86 vendors from giving away their GPUs for free?
OEMs like free stuff more than anything.
Customers aren't allowed to talk, and real big GPUs are beyond niche.Customers demanding and paying for better GPUs for starters
Who cares if every OEM box ever offers only Xe™.If a manufacturer won't sell me the product I want, I'll go find someone who will.
GPUs getting sold at a loss/little profit is perfectly legal, I mean, every console cycle starts this way.Companies dumping GPUs are going to run afoul of government regulations really damn quick
Companies the size of Intel rarely have ambitions to enter new markets they weren't really present in before.Companies are in business to make money, not give people free products.
I think that wasn't exactly true of XB1 and PS4, they used less than mid range perf GPU's and more or less off the shelf CPU parts, compared to the previous console generation they should have been quite profitable from the beginning at those prices.GPUs getting sold at a loss/little profit is perfectly legal, I mean, every console cycle starts this way.
Customers aren't allowed to talk, and real big GPUs are beyond niche.
Who cares if every OEM box ever offers only Xe™.
You're gonna take it either way.
Companies the size of Intel rarely have ambitions to enter new markets they weren't really present in before.
This isn't the first time Intel plays dirty either.
Who cares what you'll do.Maybe you will, but I certainly won't
You're a part of little obnoxious minority.The first company that starts giving consumers what they actually want is going to get a lot of free business because there are plenty of consumers like me.
Intel shareholders just *adore* TAM expansion, see them being happy about Intel buying Altera and Nervana and that NoC company.shareholders don't like money pits that suck up dollars that could have been paid out as dividends
They'll just get deplatformed.If NVidia is gone from laptops in 3-4 years it's only because they have such an inferior product that no in the market wants to buy it
AMD willingly exited server market before Naples.much the same way that AMD vanished from the server CPU market for a time
With Nintendo it certainly isn't true, they have been extremely economical on hardware since Wii basically reused the generation before with increased clockspeeds and a new controller.
If Intel makes a "good enough" GPU and prices it well, it won't matter. They'll pull a lot of buyers away from the low end of AMD and Nvidia's market quickly, especially with OEM deals. Don't underestimate the subversiveness of large corporations to get their way. Nvidia and AMD are little fish to Intel. Intel will dump GPUs if they want to, not if the government lets them. Period.It doesn't matter how inexpensive Intel makes their GPU if it sucks and consumers don't want to buy it. If a manufacturer won't sell me the product I want, I'll go find someone who will.
Companies dumping GPUs are going to run afoul of government regulations really damn quick. This also assumes they'd give them away for free to begin with which seems pretty unlikely. Companies are in business to make money, not give people free products.
It will never happen, their PR fu is maximum, it cannot be beaten!If NVidia is gone from laptops in 3-4 years it's only because they have such an inferior product that no in the market wants to buy it, in much the same way that AMD vanished from the server CPU market for a time.
That was due to Nintendo pushing the boat out too far on hardware re-use (ie taking the piss out of customers), and in my opinion they conned people into thinking it had a major CPU upgrade when they mentioned Watson (basically implying it was a POWER7 derivative).Ironic you say that, since Nintendo is the last to actually sell a console at a loss, with the WiiU (not counting Black Friday sales).
They're handhelds.Taking all that aside, their 3DS and Switch consoles have been fairly profitable though?
Switch is both a handheld and a TV console, however weak its hardware is in relative terms to competitors in the latter market.They're handhelds.
When was the last time Nintendo handhelds flopped?
Aka it's pointless, handhelds is a mature and saturated market.Any serious competitor needs a range of 1st party and loyal 3rd party casual games to compete against Nin's army
Pretty much yeah, back in the days of PSP it may have been possible, now it's just lost to Nintendo unless they take a serious fall for some reason (I don't think it likely to be clear).Aka it's pointless, handhelds is a mature and saturated market.
Phones also mean that handheld TAM is static.Pretty much yeah, back in the days of PSP it may have been possible, now it's just lost to Nintendo unless they take a serious fall for some reason (I don't think it likely to be clear).
I remember awhile ago Nintendo were making big moves towards serious efforts on mobile with their first party game line up, they clearly reined it in and then some since then.Phones also mean that handheld TAM is static.