Read more.Invites for a special event in Macau, China have been received by several media outlets.
Read more.Invites for a special event in Macau, China have been received by several media outlets.
You didn't get one from the nVidia editor's day? That surprises me.Originally Posted by hexus
and it will be a blast on Nvidia faces if AMD's 1080 level card comes with HBM2.0 and the rest lower range with GDDR5-X, hope the card at launch will be playing Witcher 3 on an LG 8K LED tv with all settings max!
I am more excited now.
AMD has an art of shattering my dreams... by the time the Vega launches 2 million 1080's would have been sold (more profits for NVidia)
Why does that shatter your dreams? nVidia selling millions of cards (they won't all be 1080) won't affect your ability to get Vega if that's what you're waiting for. AMD are going to do very well with Polaris - possibly matching or even exceeding nVidia, which would be a huge achievement in the discrete card space given how far behind they are already (in terms of discreet market share).
nVidia already sell millions, so they wouldn't be gaining any market share if they continued to do so. But either way, I don't think the 1080 threatens AMD's market share in the slightest - I don't know how many $600 consumer products AMD currently sells but it can't be that many.
No, from an AMD surviving point of view things are looking really good - they've got the console wins, and it looks like they've got great chips for largest volume sales with no immediate answer from nVidia.
Millennium (17-05-2016)
Maybe people won't 'get it' because no-one but AMD knows its performance at this point? All we have are rumours.
I don't think many people who understand the realities of GPU manufacturing expected a Fury-like (in terms of die size) GPU any time soon, but we're not getting anything like that from Nvidia either - the 1080 has a smaller die size than the 980, let alone the 980Ti which is a completely different GPU. The 'big Pascal' comes 2017; whether it will end up on the gaming market (probably dependent on cost/yields on 16nm at the time) we'll have to wait and see.
Because some people seem to think it's all about the halo products (although that does seem to help in marketing terms for some reason), in reality the hugely expensive top-end cards are extremely low volume compared to the more mainstream GPUs you'll find in laptops too. If AMD want to increase sales and profit it makes perfect sense to concentrate on this market instead of prioritising the most expensive-to-make and lowest-selling part.
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