I agree with you that Client GPUs and node jumps in general are experiencing stagnation; however, am quite positive about AMD having a better handle on how Navi should turn out as they had another (bigger) 7nm part in production for atleast 6+ months. Maybe TSMC let them down and they were...
It started out as mere 10-20 Watt difference in the very beginning but only grew with each newer variation of Polaris & reached cataclysmic proportions with the 590.
Yes, those preview cards are running on Polaris Chips. In any case 180 Watts for a Rx2060 counter and 225 Watts for an Rx2070...
If not for Nvidia's overzealous attempt to include dedicated RT hardware in RTX chips, they would have left team RTG in the dust.
Look at 1660Tis power efficiency. Now imagine scaled up GTX 1700 & 1800 parts (just regular Turing shaders / sans RT HW), similar to 1660Ti. Would've been absolute...
I apologize for deviating the discussion off course but I've suffered through back issues for 10+ years myself.
Back pain is a deadlock. Sitting / standing still / lying in bed for prolonged period triggers/aggravates it (if very overweight / past injury) and since one is in so much pain...
That's a lot of could's..
It's a new uArc yes, so it gains a few things and looses a few things.. Kind of a rebalancing act for AMD as they need to make the most out of die space.. I am pretty sure this is a 256mm^2 chip and that fits perfectly into that 44-48 CU bracket. 40CU setup sounds...
Spot on. This is at least a 256mm^2 chip, if not 275mm^2, as predicted by Ryan;
which makes it 25% smaller than the other 7mm AMD Chip (Vega 20)
@ 25% less than Vega 20 (331mm^2/64CUs) = ~ 250mm^2 / 48CUs
However, @ 275mm^2 or higher, it would be a 56 CU chip
@ 15% less than Vega 20...
Remote is one of the Biggest advantages IMO.
I always have 2 or more input streams hooked up to my Monitor / TV and switching them via remote is the easiest.
Also, split screen co-op with family/friends is lot more enjoyable on a Bigger Screen.
I'm feeling more confident now switching to a...
WOW, a RX 5700 is competing against RTX 2070
So, that implies a RX 5800 vs RTX 2080
Maybe, an RX 5900 vs RTX 2080Ti
& New RDNA Architecture !!
Good Times ahead :)
PCI Gen 3 is backwards compatible with Gen 2, so you can use a PCI 3.0 graphics card in your PCI 2.0 Motherboard. Also, performance trade-off is negligible at lower performance levels.
You can just drop in a GTX 1650 or an RX 570 and both would perform considerably better than GTX 760 for...
There are a lot of ways they can carve out this chip:
32CU
35CU
36CU
They'd most likely disable faulty CU's on a particular chip. 36CUs for the cut down part would give minimal performance hit.
Last time around, they launched the Full Polaris desktop part which was almost a replica of...
I find it amusing that one of tech publications key argument in favor of GTX 1650 is it's lack of 6pin connector; whilst majority of 1650's being reviewed had a 6 Pin. They didn't appear to be bothered by the fact that they're reviewing a card with a 6 pin and praising the lack of same...
I've been eyeing their 2018 series Samsung NU 7100 (they've just released it's 2019 version RU 7100 as well ) Both appear to be using a similar panel. Not much different than your TV, except new panels have dropped Wide Color Gamut found on Ku7000. Samsung's 8000 series features AMD Freesync but...
According to Sapphire Rep - $399 Navi variant is better than RTX 2060 and the $499 variant "Matches" RTX 2070.
Per their logic, if that $499 Navi SKU "matches/competes" with a RTX 2070, then it's most likely in DX12/Vulcan games that favor AMD; kind of one's that Radeon 7 has lead over RTX...
Completely agree with your logic and have been contemplating the same myself, for the next Monitor+GPU purchase. I presume that's a 40" 4K TV that you're utilizing as a PC monitor. Is that so?
I'm too looking to purchase something similar, as in a large screen with pixels that don't look too...
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