RedJaron
Splendid
animalosity :
@RedJaron You brought absolutely nothing new to the table here.
animalosity :
I made a point about something in which you completely failed to refute.
You then attempted to make some point about a "consumer" card, but since you won't ( or can't ) define what you mean by "consumer" then any point you wish to make is ethereal at best.
animalosity :
I had one blanket statement, but at the same time, I'm not totally wrong either, and you can't back it up either.
animalosity :
There were a total of two people who responded to me explaining that their only "concern" with TDP was heat output due to mini ITX builds and of course with more current, naturally comes heat. That I can believe.
animalosity :
Secondly, I'm well aware of AMD's FirePro, or Nvidia's Quadro line. Those are catered to individuals who need heavy compute power to conduct intense rendering as such with graphical artists or perhaps animators. You knew exactly what I meant.
You threw out the word "consumer." Now, contrary to what you may believe, a consumer is someone who buys and consumes goods and services. That's it. So in actuality, I don't care if you're using integrated Intel graphics or triple SLI 980s, you're still using consumer graphics because you paid for a commodity. The most often used dichotomy with consumer is professional, someone who gets paid for a service, or classifying goods that are used primarily for a professional to work on to get paid. That is why I threw that out there. But I was pretty sure you weren't talking about actual professional level cards, which again made me wonder what exactly you meant by it. Hence I offered some other terms to gauge exactly what you were meaning. And as of now, I'm still wondering.
animalosity :
The GTX 960 is no where near consumer level.
animalosity :
Consumer's don't spend $200 on a GPU.
animalosity :
"Consumers" go out and buy a Dell or HP, because they don't know any better or if they do, they have already chosen a basic desktop workstation that meets their basic office application needs.
animalosity :
Professional grade Graphics and gaming GPU's are two completely different architectures, and the fact that you decided to try to compare the two and then berate me with your ignorant reply, just furthers the lackluster argument you came to the table with.
animalosity :
As far as my Corvette analogy is concerned, I suppose I could have clarified a bit more. Sure, the Corvette may be THE flagship for Chevrolet, or perhaps American motorists in general, but globally, the fabled American icon is far from "flag ship" when you consider other auto makers. Take the Volkswagen group for example. They own Bugatti, Lamborghini, Porsche, Bentley, Audi and so on. I think you get my point. While the former subject (The Corvette) may cost no where near the price tag of say a brand new Lamborghini Aventador (or even remotely close the the same engine) both can be considered sports cars yes? While one remains relatively affordable as the comparison between the GTX 960 and the Corvette, the GTX 980 may be more closely related to the above mentioned Lamborghini. Faster, more expensive, and not as many people own one. Both cars still get terrible gas mileage...Read that however you may.....
It's pretty simple here. What the blazes do you mean by "consumer GPU"? For that matter, what term do you use to describe "non-consumer and non-professional"? What are your criteria? You can rant and rave at me all day, but the only thing to blame here is your poor vocabulary and vernacular and refusal to answer some simple, genuine questions.