News Chinese e-tailers list Nvidia's RTX 5060, RTX 5060 Ti, priced up to equivalent of US$528

This GPU market is so screwed up I don't know how anyone can make sense of it.

How do you rate performance? - Well, are you turning on MFG or not?

How do you rate value? - Well, are you basing it on MSRP or actual market rate?

There is no easily discernable "truth" in any of it. But one thing I DO know - I would never spend 500 bucks on a 60-series.
 
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This GPU market is so screwed up I don't know how anyone can make sense of it.

How do you rate performance? - Well, are you turning on MFG or not?

How do you rate value? - Well, are you basing it on MSRP or actual market rate?

There is no easily discernable "truth" in any of it. But one thing I DO know - I would never spend 500 bucks on a 60-series.
Then spend $800 for 70 series!
😉
And I don`t mean ti model that goes $1000…
 
"An intriguing thing about the GeForce RTX 5060 is that an unknown Chinese retailer lists a 12GB version of the GeForce RTX 5060 (non-Ti), which is something that we have not heard of before. This could be a typo"
or it could be a card using 3GB Vram chips
 
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"An intriguing thing about the GeForce RTX 5060 is that an unknown Chinese retailer lists a 12GB version of the GeForce RTX 5060 (non-Ti), which is something that we have not heard of before. This could be a typo"
or it could be a card using 3GB Vram chips
"Assuming that we are dealing with a GB206-based product, then Nvidia and its partners could use four 24Gb GDDR7 ICs to assemble a 128-bit 12GB subsystem."

It is a typo. Has to be. That makes no sense. AI writing which cant do math?
 
"Assuming that we are dealing with a GB206-based product, then Nvidia and its partners could use four 24Gb GDDR7 ICs to assemble a 128-bit 12GB subsystem."

It is a typo. Has to be. That makes no sense. AI writing which cant do math?
24Gb is 3GB, and 3GB x 4 equals to 12GB, or am I missing something?