CAD4466HK
[H]ard|Gawd
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2008
- Messages
- 1,705
RDNA3 design explained by one of AMD's lead engineers.
That's to be determined on how RDNA 3 will perform in reality due to the chiplet design. My guess is it will excel in some games, others will see mediocre performance improvements (I suppose why AMD has such a large range of improvement in their slides).RDNA3 looks to dominate Nv's 4000 series on price/performance but there are a few big undecideds.
How big of an impact will RT hold this gen? AMD has improved but still a ways behind and if the buying public says a big price bump is justified for better RT then it is moot.
Can AMD even produce enough cards to make a market denting impact even if they are the price/performance king. If so then they could mostly be gobbled up by scalpers?
The 4090 is such a beast but in being so is very unapproachable to the masses. Super enthusiast PC master racists gobbled them up and will continue to do so. It was a lot to push for a halo product.
And I don't really see the 4090 (and certainly not the 4080) being "gobbled up". It's weeks after launch and they are still readily available most places. Way too expensive for people's blood, regardless of the performance uplift.
Nearly every vendor here in the UK and EU have both the 4090 and 4080 in stock and not far off MSRP. It's just no one wants them here due to the cost (and better things to spend money on).If you can find a 4090 so easy get me one, I've been watching stock trackers and checking sites for a month straight and haven't even seen one in stock that wasn't 2-3x MSRP.
Nearly every vendor here in the UK and EU have both the 4090 and 4080 in stock and not far off MSRP. It's just no one wants them here due to the cost (and better things to spend money on).
Here in the Netherlands they are either not in stock, or are priced how scalpers would by the stores themselves.Nearly every vendor here in the UK and EU have both the 4090 and 4080 in stock and not far off MSRP. It's just no one wants them here due to the cost (and better things to spend money on).
From what I saw most cards haven't been restocked since October. That did not include MC inventory but I'm sure they aren't getting many either.I wish I could find one. I've had one on backorder for 3 weeks or so but they don't know when they'll get more, and if they come into stock anywhere else they're sold out in about 60 seconds, most of the time you can't even get them in your cart.
And they won't be restocked until January from my understanding. nV and AIBs put the entirety of their initial stock in the channel so they could move as many cards as possible before they need to lower prices next year and/or recession kicks in full force and the market regresses.From what I saw most cards haven't been restocked since October. That did not include MC inventory but I'm sure they aren't getting many either.
HEY, stop defaming us!Super enthusiast PC master racists
Just as much as AMD is, of course. For those unaware, AMD did not invent chiplets, let alone MCM.NVIDIA copycatting chiplets in 3,2,1...
I was just in a store which was getting some of them in today - probably not in your country, though. The poster just before you said what I thought - ppl will pass on it based on the high price. The rich ppl will buy it, regardless of what it's priced at. He's correct, imho.If you can find a 4090 so easy get me one, I've been watching stock trackers and checking sites for a month straight and haven't even seen one in stock that wasn't 2-3x MSRP.
I was just in a store which was getting some of them in today - probably not in your country, though. The poster just before you said what I thought - ppl will pass on it based on the high price. The rich ppl will buy it, regardless of what it's priced at. He's correct, imho.
The only key difference from chiplets to MCMs to today is cost reduction... AMD pull it out by implementing their own design and tech. also, Pentium Pro was really the first "consumer level" MCM "processor+cache"...AMD diD NoT InVeNt cHipLeTs, LeT aLoNe McM.
AMD has done a lot of catching up but they still have a lot ore catching up to do.. they are extremely more competitive now.. I remember having the 4870x2 that was my last radeon card.The only key difference from chiplets to MCMs to today is cost reduction... AMD pull it out by implementing their own design and tech. also, Pentium Pro was really the first "consumer level" MCM "processor+cache"...
Just as much as AMD is, of course. For those unaware, AMD did not invent chiplets, let alone MCM.
I present to you the IBM z10:
View attachment 528812
IBM released this thing back in 2008, before AMD face planted hard with bulldozer.![]()