Reduced demand for GPUs won't be translating to lower prices this time...
No Lower GPU Prices Despite Reduced GPU Demand : Read more
No Lower GPU Prices Despite Reduced GPU Demand : Read more
If only people would be excited about crunching Folding@home for science on their GPUs, but most people are selfish or don't know the program exists.
The key to reduced GPU prices is to buy them used.
If only people would be excited about crunching Folding@home for science on their GPUs, but most people are selfish or don't know the program exists.
The key to reduced GPU prices is to buy them used.
Selfish for not folding? You obviously do not pay electrical bills.
Prices are exactly what the market demands. Sometimes you can get more relative performance for dollar, sometimes not. There is no conspiracy, and people owning cards and not folding is far from selfish.
Expecting free energy from graphics card owners is the only thing that is selfish. Altruism in science is a fallacy.
The problem for AMD is they don't make a good enough product (or driver to help it) to charge more vs NV, so they sell cheaper and get screwed even more than NV. We need both stronger! This isn't fanboy junk here, it's being a FAN of BOTH companies making REAL money to R&D the next round etc forever. Broke companies put out crap. I fear if both don't start making more we will start getting worse stuff than now, though in fairness both make great cards. If you have anything over 3-4yrs old you have some serious upgrade power at any price related to your old gpus price. We can't really complain here.
I hope you're right. But I worry that AMD and NVidia will instead jack up the prices just like they did with the last generation. To upgrade your $150-200 6850 to a 7850 cost you $250-300, and to upgrade your 7850 to an 8850 (or whatever they name the next 200mm2 256bit board) will cost you $400 (decreasing with each rebadging before the next shrink, 6 years down the road).Worst case, the market will reset when 20-22nm products come to market and everyone will be trying to dump their 28+nm stock.
CaedenV :Mark my words, this kind of pricing is going to become the norm going forwards.
I would guess the opposite: while Intel has been raising CPU prices by ~$10 with each generation since Sandy, people's attachment to the traditional PC is starting to weaken with all the non-PC computing devices floating around. With Android, ChromeOS, FFOS, etc. devices becoming a fair bit more powerful each year, there will be a point where mobile platforms will have enough resources to become a real threat to desktops... in many cases, they already are but are still missing adequate software to make it happen. Intel is going to have a hard time selling $200-300 CPUs and a $40 chipset when people can get a device designed around a $30 Atom or ARM SoC that also gets the job done well enough.
On the GPU side, the mid/high-end is not really in danger since both AMD and Nvidia introduce at least one thing worth considering each year that will be enough to make most enthusiasts start to itch for upgrades at least every other year. At the low-end though, you have IGPs that are currently good enough to obsolesce most discrete GPUs below $100 and will likely claw their way up, which is going to make a pretty big dent in revenue from sub-$100 products. On the plus side, this may force people into shopping in a bracket $25-50 above what they otherwise would and offset lost mid-range sales from people who are stretching their current ~$150 GPUs an extra year. Not necessarily a bad thing.