i am running sli 9600GT's ... can u please tell me what buggy game play i should be experiencing according to you?
Age of Conan doesn't play well with SLI.
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i am running sli 9600GT's ... can u please tell me what buggy game play i should be experiencing according to you?
I see that reading isn't one of your strong points. They do have declining market share in chipsets, and declining sales of their video cards. The declining sales is affecting ATI as well, it's what the market for the product is right now. As the United States slips further into its recession the market will decline further, which makes price all that much more important.
One thing we don't know is exactly how profitable the 9800GTX+ is for nVidia. They just did a major price drop on the product and will likely drop its price again, as ATI can be extremely competitive on price. I'm already seeing 4850s here in Canada selling well below MSRP, and that's something that rarely happens.
CUDA is interesting but hardly unique to nVidia. ATI has their own version as well, and I would hesitate to say there's a currently a large market for it. The market may develop, but nVidia will hardly be the only player.
If you've been an nVidia shareholder for any length of time you've already seen big losses on your investment, so your argument there doesn't hold water. Feel free to try again though.
Age of Conan doesn't play well with SLI.
Age of Conan doesn't play well with SLI.
It'll be business as usual. NV isn't going anywhere![]()
didnt notice anything when i played the demo....demo didnt blow me away ...no big deal to me
There was no demo. There was a closed beta if thats what you mean.
QFT.
before too long nvidia will release another mid-range card and people will yell "omg what will happen to ATI".
some people tend to forget that from the business perspective all this isn't as religious as it seems to be from an enthusiasts point of view.![]()
So, It looks like you're very much convinced that it's time to buy NVDA.Lets see.... AMD... 52 week High16.19
Current market price... 5.95. or down 63%. Nvidia is off only 52% off it's 52 week high.
This was the last rating change on Nvidia.
Cowen Starts NVIDIA (NVDA) at Outperform
Last I checked it was at 70/30 outpreform/underperform.
This stock is undervalued, it is the time to buy.
Also, the value of the stock of a company has no dealing with the operations of the company when the company is not issuing stock.
So, It looks like you're very much convinced that it's time to buy NVDA.
And if you really get swayed by the analysts "recommendations" then good luck!
You'll need lots and lots of it...
Please point to any numbers that nvidia is losing video card sales, they are not, they still maintain a 2:1 adv over amd, this will not change.
The amd design has nowhere near the gt200. first of the 256 bus is too narrow and limiting for the applications that would use cuda, its simply a waste to spend a ton of money for ddr5 when both speed and quanity are both an issue. the chip is so big because they devoted so much space to stream processing. You view of the world if far too narrow. The 9800gtx+ will do just fine for nvidia to mantain marketshare. the 9800gtx+ is based on a design that already paid for itself and its on 55nm, decide for yourselves if you think they will be making a profit on it. nvidia dominates amd chipsets, and it will get the intel license (courtesy intel rightly fearing the ongoing doj invesitigation and the drooling eu on the sideline just waiting to pounce). If you sold your stock, all i can say is i don't know what your thinking. there are only going to be two players in the cuda market, intel and nvidia, right now nivdia has the edge, and its alot more cost effective to buy nvidia than intel. As other posters have remarked, nvidia is quite undervalued right now.
nVidia won't be going anyhwere anytime soon, but this will give ATi/AMD a much needed boost. And while I love my rig right now, I have a 4850 on the way to play with as well. A real tech enthusiast is not a brand loyalist, but a perforamnce loyalist and ony a fool would deny that ATi did some cool stuff with the 48xx series.
So, It looks like you're very much convinced that it's time to buy NVDA.
And if you really get swayed by the analysts "recommendations" then good luck!
You'll need lots and lots of it...
LOL. i'd love to hear the argument in court on thatNvidia will blame piracy for poor card sales.
They may have a 2:1 advantage, but overall sales numbers are down. I've been looking for the article I read about it, it was very detailed. If you look at nVidia's income statement this becomes very apparent (reduced shipments = less money).
Let's wait until we start seeing benchmarks on this, I'd be surprised if it's that big of a hindrance. The chip itself is far too large, I'd be shocked if nVidia came out with a bigger chip in the future. The yields must be terrible on such a large chip, and that greatly increases cost. That's why ATI decided to keep theirs small and scalable. The R700s are far cheaper to produce and that's an advantage that nVidia will never meet.
What we don't know is how much it costs to produce the 9800GTX GPU and what nVidia sells it for. They sell it for much less then they did a couple of weeks ago, so their profit per unit has been reduced. The research has been paid for, certainly, but there are still costs in production for nVidia, and fixed costs such as patent royalties. They'll need a lot more than the 9800GTX+ to simply maintain their market share, the R700 is a great product and it works on the Intel chipset boards that enthusiasts are buying now. People buying cheap PCs at Best Buy probably aren't ever going to upgrade the video card, let alone bother with SLI (if it has a SLI chipset).
nVidia no longer dominates AMD chipsets, and they haven't for quite some time now. Once existing contracts expire the PC makers have been switching to AMD for that service. Instead of dealing with two vendors for CPUs and chipsets they now only have to deal with one, and that improved efficiency helps their bottom line. Not to mention that AMD will be able to give them a better price if they buy a chipset with a CPU, and they can offer their graphic cards at a better price too.
Intel forced Via out of the chipset market, and they can do the same thing to nVidia. They won't refuse to grant them a license, but they can make the royalty payments so expensive that it would be hard to make a profit. The DOJ will take years to do any investigation, and they still have to take the case to court. By the time a judge found them guilty nVidia would be long out of the market.
What was I thinking? I sold at $34 (at a nice profit), and it's now $19. I would be losing money on nVidia right now - you do the math. As far as the stock goes, Intel is still a great investment because they pay regular dividends (nVidia doesn't).
My view of the world is hardly narrow, I find it to be realistic and it serves me well.
A rubbish company like this, it deserves to be wiped out from the market.
Very well said. nVidia is getting own on all sides, their little chipsets are doomed for sure, their GPU are getting owned. It is also dragging the tech from going forward -- the dx10.1 could benefit the gamers. A rubbish company like this, it deserves to be wiped out from the market.
I take it none of you guys are lawyers, because the result of a loss to the DOJ would be that intel would be dismantle, why because they would be guilty of useing thier cpu to aid thier chipsets, it would be what happened to ATT. Intel did what it did to via before enron and the rise of the EU. Intel will extend the license at the same price.
I'm sorry but your world view is narrow, you still viewing this situation as a consumer and thats fine, but thats only a very small part of the picture. The big picture as i said before, is nvidia 9800+gtx will do just fine in the consumer space, the war is about the GPGPU.
If you know anything about economics and engineering you know nvidia making money on the 9800gtx+. The chip has already paid for itself, its just a die shrink of the g80 which was hugely sucessfull made on a more efficeient fab process. Why do they need more than that?
Well it depends on whether or not you believe in stocks as long or short term investments, as a short term matter, sure you made money, but as a long term matter, i think you move was short sighted, because the potentional profits from the CUDA is huge, and Nvidia as it stands at the very least has as much chance if not better than intel. Its not a sure thing, investment never is, but they are good risks and bads, and good sells and bad sells. Selling yahoo is a good sell, they really have no good future prospects, selling amd/ati is probally good, because they are going to do much other than maintain, but I'm sorry selling Nvidia at the juncture doesn't make any long term economics sense to me.
We will just have to agree to disagree
I would buy the 4850 but i would not sell my nivdia stock at this juncture , I don't let me pc gaming interfere with my profit making.
Nvidia has already taken the hit for ATI's resurgence. At this point I actually think its a good buy, unless you're looking for short term gains. In the 6 month time window if it hasn't appreciated, I would be stunned.
1. Just like how the DoJ/EU dismatled Microsoft?
2. Actually, my view does seem broader then yours. You've completely discounted AMD/ATI, but they actually have a very good 'CUDA' style processor. You don't seem to have taken into consideration that the R700 was built to be scalable, they can fit several of them onto one card. That's going to be very difficult for nVidia to do, even after a die shrink. Even though these cards will be exceptionally profitable, they'll still account for less than 1% of shipments.
3. I didn't say they weren't making money on the 9800GTX+, I said they're making less money. That is true.
4. I invest for the long term in reputable companies that have a good track record. nVidia is possibly a good buy at $19, but I would have to been stupid not to sell when I did. I would have lost $15 per share (on today's price), and it would be below the purchase price. I've also made money in the companies I reinvested in, so I would have lost that as well. An investor you are not.
- HybridSLI intel chipsets
Actually, they'll launch fanboys spouting microstutter.![]()
Actually, they'll launch fanboys spouting microstutter.![]()
Nvidia will blame piracy for poor card sales.
Hmmm..This and everything below it leads me to conclude that you're not even a fanboy, you're just retarded. Cuda market is still very small, and I don't think for Dell or other major computer sellers cuda matters that much yet.Second the chip is a huge sucess, because its aim at the market it should be aimed at, the emerging Cuda market.
Nope, for $30 more all you get is a plus sign; 9800gtx+ is barely equall to 4850 in most games, I think there is only two games where it manages to pull ahead. 9800gtx+ is a 55nm shrink ultra clocked version of the 8800gts, its not something insanely ****ing awsome.9800gtx+ plus does just fine as the a consumer card to go against ati.
256 bit bus seems to work out just fine for 4850. Look around at review sites and [H]If AMD weren't in such dire straits at the moment I am sure they would have spent the money to develop the 512-bit memory bus that is going to essential in this area, and just cede the battle for this market to nvidia and soon intel.
Ok, first this is NOT trolling. Just a real question.
With ATI's new 48xx series cards performing so well (including the 4870x2). I would imagine Nvidia's series will be a flop... as in not sell very well.
Will Nvidia lose much money? If so, what will they do to try and compete? It seems Nvidia is on defense now on all fronts (chipsets and gpu's). Will this make them push the partnership with VIA more?
Just wondering what the landscape will look like in a year or so.
Very well said. nVidia is getting own on all sides, their little chipsets are doomed for sure, their GPU are getting owned. It is also dragging the tech from going forward -- the dx10.1 could benefit the gamers. A rubbish company like this, it deserves to be wiped out from the market.
NVIDIA only released the high-end cards and that's NOT where the big bucks are.
In a year, the landscape will change, only due to the fact that Intel may become a major player in the discrete graphics cards market. Other than that, the only question is if AMD can survive Nehalem.
NVIDIA only released the high-end cards and that's NOT where the big bucks are.
In a year, the landscape will change, only due to the fact that Intel may become a major player in the discrete graphics cards market. Other than that, the only question is if AMD can survive Nehalem.