Originally posted by: Bull Dog
nVIDIA still makes and sells reference cards to OEM's.
Originally posted by: aka1nas
It probably allows them to focus on GPU design and stay lean and mean. If you think about it, it's pretty smart as if the cards don't sell Nvidia has still been paid for the chips and the board manufacturer is screwed.
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: aka1nas
It probably allows them to focus on GPU design and stay lean and mean. If you think about it, it's pretty smart as if the cards don't sell Nvidia has still been paid for the chips and the board manufacturer is screwed.
Yeah, but they pass up potential profits they could make by selling their own cards. Since they sell the GPUs to OEMs at a profit, if they made their own cards they could either sell them for less or make more money than anyone else on each card.
Of course, that has to be balanced against potentially pissing off the other card makers, since the chip maker gets an effective discount on their raw materials (they get the GPUs at cost). If ATI tried to undercut everyone else in the market, Sapphire and everyone else would be pissed.
Originally posted by: Cooler
Sapphire makes BBA for ATI so i dont think they would be pissed if they made more money.
Originally posted by: Frostwake
Well I was looking at that "ati vs saphire" thread and this crossed my mind, why does nvidia only sell through 3rd party manufacturers?
Originally posted by: FalllenAngell
Originally posted by: Frostwake
Well I was looking at that "ati vs saphire" thread and this crossed my mind, why does nvidia only sell through 3rd party manufacturers?
If you look at the historical earnings of nVidia vs. ATI, the reason could be they have no reason to change.
nVidia always makes many millions profit every quarter, and has for a very long time.
ATI loses millions most quarters, and has for a very long time.
If something is not broke, why fix it?
Originally posted by: otispunkmeyer
Originally posted by: Bull Dog
nVIDIA still makes and sells reference cards to OEM's.
yep....i got a Gf3 TI200 here, and the only badge on it is nvidia...came from a Dell
Originally posted by: Golgatha
Originally posted by: FalllenAngell
Originally posted by: Frostwake
Well I was looking at that "ati vs saphire" thread and this crossed my mind, why does nvidia only sell through 3rd party manufacturers?
If you look at the historical earnings of nVidia vs. ATI, the reason could be they have no reason to change.
nVidia always makes many millions profit every quarter, and has for a very long time.
ATI loses millions most quarters, and has for a very long time.
If something is not broke, why fix it?
Worked for 3dfx. Remember how many manufacturers had Voodoo 2 cards and then 3dfx screwed their partners by manufacturing the cards themselves and cut all their partners off...who in turn started releasing nVidia cards in droves.
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: aka1nas
It probably allows them to focus on GPU design and stay lean and mean. If you think about it, it's pretty smart as if the cards don't sell Nvidia has still been paid for the chips and the board manufacturer is screwed.
Yeah, but they pass up potential profits they could make by selling their own cards. Since they sell the GPUs to OEMs at a profit, if they made their own cards they could either sell them for less or make more money than anyone else on each card.
Of course, that has to be balanced against potentially pissing off the other card makers, since the chip maker gets an effective discount on their raw materials (they get the GPUs at cost). If ATI tried to undercut everyone else in the market, Sapphire and everyone else would be pissed.
Originally posted by: MDE
Not making cards means they don't have to provide end-user support which I'm sure is very expensive.
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: MDE
Not making cards means they don't have to provide end-user support which I'm sure is very expensive.
They still have to support the drivers (and other common things, like PureVideo). Although yes, they don't 'directly' take end-user calls, etc. NVIDIA also has to invest money producing reference card designs that they don't directly sell (although I'm not sure if they get royalties from OEMs that use their reference designs).
My point is that since they get the GPUs at cost (and already own the reference designs), ATI/NVIDIA should be able to make more profit than 'third-party' card makers selling at the same prices.
Originally posted by: aka1nas
Originally posted by: Matthias99
Originally posted by: MDE
Not making cards means they don't have to provide end-user support which I'm sure is very expensive.
They still have to support the drivers (and other common things, like PureVideo). Although yes, they don't 'directly' take end-user calls, etc. NVIDIA also has to invest money producing reference card designs that they don't directly sell (although I'm not sure if they get royalties from OEMs that use their reference designs).
My point is that since they get the GPUs at cost (and already own the reference designs), ATI/NVIDIA should be able to make more profit than 'third-party' card makers selling at the same prices.
Actually, I am pretty sure that most card manufacturers state to only use the drivers off their website and Nvidia's site says that no support is provided with the reference drivers.
BFG Tech Graphics Cards use pure NVIDIA® Unified Drivers for the best performance and stability. Follow this link and then select Graphics Driver ? GeForce and TNT ? and then your Operating System