I kinda feel for AMD a bit. They don't make bad products, but in a market where there's only two competitors and you're either considered the best or not, being the 'not' really hurts. They can provide cards that are on-paper equal with what Nvidia do at a given price point, but that's just not good enough when there's a general perception that Nvidia provides better software and driver support.
AMD really have to knock things out of the park to get back in the game. And that's hard when they're not able to commit the same resources to the job as Nvidia can. AMD have certainly made efforts here, trying to take more innovate routes with things like async compute power and stacked memory, but they're not being utilized by developers enough at the moment for their advantages to show.
AMD try. They really do. They price aggressively, they innovate, and they don't build bad GPU's. But they've got to work on fixing their reputation somehow. It feels like their biggest problem is just an image problem.
AMD really have to knock things out of the park to get back in the game. And that's hard when they're not able to commit the same resources to the job as Nvidia can. AMD have certainly made efforts here, trying to take more innovate routes with things like async compute power and stacked memory, but they're not being utilized by developers enough at the moment for their advantages to show.
AMD try. They really do. They price aggressively, they innovate, and they don't build bad GPU's. But they've got to work on fixing their reputation somehow. It feels like their biggest problem is just an image problem.