Endurance-vm
n00b
- Joined
- Apr 2, 2017
- Messages
- 20
Probably not until real time ray tracing matures and games are built from the ground up on ray trace.
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I'm looking forward to finally being able to upgrade my GTX 970 to a reasonable costing 1xxx series card (GTX 1070 Ti or GTX 1080). I think roughly November or so the cards should have dropped a fair amount, I already see prices have dropped considerably compared to the mining era peak but I still think it will drop slightly further during ~2 months time so that's roughly when I will strike. RTX 2070 (or Ti) maybe after 2 years .
Do we have any idea when 7 nm GPUs will actually be out? 2019 can be three months or 15 months.
I have a feeling AMD will come out with their new stuff this time next year.Do we have any idea when 7 nm GPUs will actually be out? 2019 can be three months or 15 months.
As i said before, i'm playing the waiting game for the benchmarks then decide. The CPU i'm interested in isn't even out yet and will also be decided on the benchmarks. As it is, my case won't be in for about a month yet so plenty of time to decide.
(Still would like to wait for a 2080 Titan version but no one except NVidia knows if it ever will come out...lol)
Usually releases are early to mid week, and in those cases review embargoes are lifted going into the adjacent weekend. Since this is a Friday release it kind of throws a wrench into that scenario. They could have lifted the embargo on the Monday to let reviewers start of the week with a bang, but I'm not a marketing person.I just saw that the review release dates for the new cards is now the 19th, not sure what it was before, but its weak they're waiting until the day before they are released to drop reviews. Is this a standard thing?
I just saw that the review release dates for the new cards is now the 19th, not sure what it was before, but its weak they're waiting until the day before they are released to drop reviews. Is this a standard thing?
AMD said they will release the 7nm at the end of this year 2018 or winter 2019.
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AMD was ambiguous, so I would guess it's a pro card that will release first similar to Vega.Didn’t I hear that was only for the professional cards?
AMD was ambiguous, so I would guess it's a pro card that will release first similar to Vega.
Well I canceled my preorder for the Gigabyte WIndowforce 2080ti.....and hopped on a preorder for an MSI Gaming X trio 2080ti heuheueheuheueheuheuheeuheuheuhe
Awaiting the arrival of the 7nm based GPUs... or the next Titan offering. I want at least a 50% or more bump in performance before I'll be tempted to throw any money at Nvidia.
I have trouble finding anything useful on 7nm. I guess the closest thing is AMD’s professional cards which are supposed to be winter.
There won’t be anything noticeably faster on 12nm.
Well I canceled my preorder for the Gigabyte WIndowforce 2080ti.....and hopped on a preorder for an MSI Gaming X trio 2080ti heuheueheuheueheuheuheeuheuheuhe
I cancelled my 2080Ti preorder and proceeded to save more than %15 on stupid people insurance at Geico!
~pew pew pew bing!~ That's the sound of stupid bouncing off of me!
That's why I'm awaiting its "arrival"... as in they still need to be designed/fabricated and hit the market. And no, I don't mean AMD's professional cards. I sure as hell am not expecting 7nm GPUs to be mainstream right now and looking around for them like you seem to be intimating. Give it a year or so... die shrinks / newer 7nm offerings will start to appear.
I can't wait to get my Ti FE.
The FE has a slightly higher power use and comes overclocked, not that it makes the price ok though.AKA Overpriced Reference Model.
The FE has a slightly higher power use and comes overclocked, not that it makes the price ok though.
The speed of the cheaper cards is a worry too, all the performance data is with clocked cards.
I cant recall where I read it but many places online say the same.That's not what Nvidia said, they're on video stating (slip of the tongue rather) that the Founders Edition's are reference cards.
I cant recall where I read it but many places online say the same.
ie
https://hexus.net/tech/reviews/grap...g-architecture-examined-and-explained/?page=8Nvidia reckons this makes sense because it has improved the cooling on the FE design significantly.
AKA Overpriced Reference Model.
Yawn. I will wait for [H] to do their testing. IMO, anything else is garbage.Supposedly leaked reviewer's guide benchmarks: https://videocardz.com/77983/nvidia-geforce-rtx-2080-ti-and-rtx-2080-official-performance-unveiled
Performance uptick looks like about what I was expecting. If the cards were priced at non-FE MSRPs I don't think they would be that bad considering there's no competition for another year.
Proof or just imagining things?No, because the 2080ti is less than twice the performance of a 2 year old 1080 but at twice the cost.