Maybe you can explain this one to me, Chimax.

I'm still completely confused as to how an unreleased chip could ever be considered high end. If we did that on a broad basis - nothing would be considered high end, heck everything is "mid-range". Now, are we going to move goal posts and state that Tahiti was always mid range. VI was in the works and there's the true high end - of course that would be a ridiculous argument. Of course GK110 is out NOW, but at GK104s launch it was in no way "mid range", because nothing better was in existence.
That argument always has, and always will be silly. GK110 wasn't released or near-ready at the time of GK104s launch, so seeing the GK104 proclaimed as mid range when nothing better was ready or released, is quite funny. Going back in time to March 2012 there is no argument for GK104 being "mid range" unless one is being intentionally obtuse. But I do understand the "mid range" phrase is a favored phrase by some more dense posters, stated as a means of starting an inflammatory argument. (I know the other side is guilty of doing similar things, before anyone points this out).
Or if we can move the goalposts for either side based on unreleased products, shall we do that? Is that a "thing" now?
Not surprising, hopefully I can explain it.
We have a clear history of what Nvidia has, why wasn't GK104 high end? Too small die, too small bus, no DP, wrong name (GK104), not enough performance increase over last gen.
There is no broad bases, it's actually quite condensed. We're looking directly at a generation, we don't break down a uarch based on product release time frames. The 6870 released before the 6970, was the 6870 high end? No of course not, that would be a stupid thought process.
Move what goalposts? I'm not sure you're able to comprehend what is being discussed. It's quite obvious Tahiti is AMD's high end product, there is no higher codename for AMD. Their product stack looks exactly like it did last generation, just like Nvidia's does. Nobody has said Tahiti was mid-range, I hope you're still following along and I didn't go too fast for you here.
Again you're using a logical fallacy to support a wayward argument. A next gen mid-range product beat a last gen high end product, this happens every generation I hate to tell you. If AMD releases the 9870 prior to the 9970 on 20nm, is the 9870 now their high end product? Again, of course not that would be just as stupid as calling a small die, small bus, no DP, mid-range code named Kepler high end simply because high end hadn't been released yet.
Yes, I agree as well. Simply a silly argument to state GK104 is anything but a mid-range design. The only discussion there is how long it actually took Nvidia to release a high end product, not that GK104 all of a sudden became a high end product despite it not being designed as a high end product simply because nvidia didn't release their high end product right away.
I was making the argument for GK104 being mid-range the moment it was released, check the post history.
Posted By: BallaTheFeared Posted: 03-06-2012 07:18 PM
No, not really... This is still the GF104 replacement, even if Nvidia is going to gouge us on it.
03-22-2012, 08:39 AM BallaTheFeared
If you ignore the 580 and 7970 and look at what this card really replaces, the 560ti, it becomes apparent that Nvidia has really done something right this generation, that's almost a 100% increase in performance in just a years time.
I wonder what kind of increase we'll see over GF110 when GK110 releases, I don't think it will be as much as this is, but it's still probably going to be an amazing card for Nvidia.
Nvidia has produce a mid range replacement which can compete with last gens dual gpu cards, it's quite impressive. The only real problem is the current state of the market, the bar wasn't raised enough by the other side and price/performance now reflects a market where one companies high end card is being eclipsed by the others mid range card. This is the problem with duo monopolies, there isn't enough competition to truly keep the consumers on the winning side of price/performance.
Probably best not to attempt to talk down to people.