- Aug 25, 2001
- 56,009
- 9,879
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I was thinking about this, after someone posted a thread in OT about HDTVs and whole-floor A/C units, and not being able to take full advantage of what they bought.
That got me thinking, to people that maybe buy discrete GPUs, and then only use them to browse the web, and not game, or do DC/mining with them.
Then that got me to thinking about AMD's Ryzen CPUs, and how they *require* a GPU to go with them. Aaaaand... not to mention, AMD makes those separate GPU cards, well, maybe not the cards, but the GPU chips that go in them.
So, that got me thinking, on some economic theories, about things like "attach rates", and "complementary products", and how maybe it really was genius, to make your major product line, "require" one of your other products to work. (*Yes, I know that you can use an NVidia GPU in an AMD CPU system too, but let's go with the example presented for now.)
(Makes me wonder, why Peanut Butter and Jelly companies haven't merged, or why we don't have squeezable peanut-butter-and-jelly in one container. Or maybe we do, and I just didn't notice yet.)
So I was therefore also wondering about the feasibility of expanding the I/O die used in the consumer AM4 Zen2-based products, so that they could provide a minimalist (non-gaming) iGPU alongside powerful Ryzen Zen2 CPU chiplets.
I also wondered about business systems and OEM rigs, and how many of them supposedly wouldn't use AMD CPUs until their APUs came out (Ryzen Pro APUs being a Good Thing here), because most desktop business systems want to have integrated graphics, and often don't have the heat, noise, power, allowance for a dGPU, even something like an RX 550.
That got me thinking, to people that maybe buy discrete GPUs, and then only use them to browse the web, and not game, or do DC/mining with them.
Then that got me to thinking about AMD's Ryzen CPUs, and how they *require* a GPU to go with them. Aaaaand... not to mention, AMD makes those separate GPU cards, well, maybe not the cards, but the GPU chips that go in them.
So, that got me thinking, on some economic theories, about things like "attach rates", and "complementary products", and how maybe it really was genius, to make your major product line, "require" one of your other products to work. (*Yes, I know that you can use an NVidia GPU in an AMD CPU system too, but let's go with the example presented for now.)
(Makes me wonder, why Peanut Butter and Jelly companies haven't merged, or why we don't have squeezable peanut-butter-and-jelly in one container. Or maybe we do, and I just didn't notice yet.)
So I was therefore also wondering about the feasibility of expanding the I/O die used in the consumer AM4 Zen2-based products, so that they could provide a minimalist (non-gaming) iGPU alongside powerful Ryzen Zen2 CPU chiplets.
I also wondered about business systems and OEM rigs, and how many of them supposedly wouldn't use AMD CPUs until their APUs came out (Ryzen Pro APUs being a Good Thing here), because most desktop business systems want to have integrated graphics, and often don't have the heat, noise, power, allowance for a dGPU, even something like an RX 550.