AMD is showing some confidence in pricing its FirePro W9100 at $4000. Compared to the slower Quadro K5000 at $1800 and the faster Quadro K6000 at $5000, AMD isn't far off the mark, though. And in the end, the FirePro W9100 surfaces as a strong candidate for high-end workstation duty, particularly when your workload is well-suited to the GPU's strengths (and the
driver
team's priorities).
How does the FirePro W9100 fare in our final analysis, then? The $4000 card's price tag is justified by excellent performance, versatility across mature professional segments and the latest workloads, and unmatched connectivity. You get a mix of speed in 3D tasks and general-purpose compute-intensive apps, or both at the same time.
It'll be interesting to see how many professionals dig deep for no-compromise speed in their performance-sensitive software. If the audience is out there, AMD's FirePro W9100 should help reclaim some of the company's workstation market share.