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The topend GPU cards seem to be going up real big time each yearI think they would go bankrupt at them prices
I've been wondering about this recently, I remember paying £400 for a top end GPU in late 2003. I wonder what that equates to these days in real terms allowing for inflation and exchange rate changes?The topend GPU cards seem to be going up real big time each year
I've been wondering about this recently, I remember paying £400 for a top end GPU in late 2003. I wonder what that equates to these days in real terms allowing for inflation and exchange rate changes?
I know what you mean..I've been wondering about this recently, I remember paying £400 for a top end GPU in late 2003. I wonder what that equates to these days in real terms allowing for inflation and exchange rate changes?
Yeah that's the other thing I noticed, GPUs seem to be the only thing that have substantially increased in price, with the odd exception (AMD 1GHzT-birds were £1k on release).I know what you mean..
But it just feels far worst because most other PC Components are far cheaper now then back then..![]()
The topend GPU cards seem to be going up real big time each year
The GTX 690 was priced at £900 at release
http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showthread.php?t=18399630&highlight=gtx+680+release
The MSI GTX 590 was priced at £615 at release...
http://forums.overclockers.co.uk/showthread.php?t=18256082&highlight=gtx+590+release
That was a £285 jump in price from one gen to the next gen...![]()
Worse is one of those was two high end chips from last gen that were 500mm2 each, this gen that 690 was 2 of the midrange 300mm2 chips.
Nvidia are taking the pee, and reviewers are paid for their results.
I mean if you look at Anandtech now, you've got a Titan 50% faster than a 680gtx in several situations, while only being 10-15% ahead of a 7970 in the same benchmark.
People have been happily paying around £500 for Nvidia's midrange card, while AMD's high end card has been cheaper and noticeably faster.
I expect the 780 to be made of more available parts (ie, not low yielding) and therefore also much cheaper while also blowing away the Titan![]()
I've been wondering about this recently, I remember paying £400 for a top end GPU in late 2003. I wonder what that equates to these days in real terms allowing for inflation and exchange rate changes?
they are as bad as each other - AMD stacked their 7970 release price on top of the already expensive 580 3GB price... Nvidia then released the 680 which outperformed the 7970 on release day AND undercut them on price forcing AMD to slash prices to compete and it's taken them the best part of 12 months to get their drivers in shape
[H] has reviewed the 680 v 7970 both on max oc's, should put the argument to bed now.
Here's the figures strictly for the enthusiasts(the ex overclockers who now prefer stock performance may look away now):
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Full review here:
http://hardocp.com/article/2012/04/04/nvidia_kepler_geforce_gtx_680_overclocking_review/1
'The Bottom Line
One thing is certain after our overclocking, the default GPU Boost settings are not the highest frequency the GeForce GTX 680 is capable of. The GPU frequency can certainly be improved by manual overclocking. There is a bit of headroom yet to be had with this GPU. We strongly feel that it is voltage that is holding this GPU back. We look forward to custom-built GeForce GTX 680 video cards. With a custom-built PCB, custom-HSF, and all the high-efficiency hardware add-in-board partners like to use, we can't wait to see custom capabilities with the GeForce GTX 680.
Despite the not-so Earth shattering overclocking results we achieved today, the GeForce GTX 680 is still able to compete well with the Radeon HD 7970, even overclocked. The fact remains that for a less expensive price[USA review remember] the GeForce GTX 680 remains a cost saving venture for a similar experience. Overclocking will buy you 15% or so better performance on a reference design board, but if you are interested in overclocking, we suggest you look toward custom add-in-board video cards for what may truly be possible out of the GeForce GTX 680.'
There you have it, unless you absolutuley need Cuda/PhysX/Nvidia3D/Eyefinity?, then imho, buy the cheapest of the two that you can find.
Anyone who could tell the difference sitting side by side with no fps counter really must be called Steve Austin!
I thought that this very heated subject deserved it's own thread even if the review has already been posted in one of the other threads.
Roy: "I'm really glad to be back, and to able to talk to the press again. On this call I recognize some old names, and some old friends, and it's good to be back. What I wanted to say to you all was that right now, as it stands, AMD has the fastest GPUs at every point in our stack. I don't think it feels like that, and I don't think that it's been widely reported in the press. I'd like to ask you (the press) to make that clear to your readers
if you want ludicrous tell me why they're still charging £3k for the tesla, or indeed the prices they want for any of the quadro range.