The issue isnt development time, costs, or support.
If you have a finite amount of resources (in this case - fab capacity and RAM) — and you can make XX% margin making one product, but XX% times 5 making another…
the first product will just bleed a slow death until you can get everyone some...
All the big news I've been seeing so far... and admittedly I have not been watching very closely
...is all the previous generation OLED monitors going on fire sale.
That, and AI seems to no longer the big buzzword, just another marketing bullet point that everyone is assumed to have.
Oh it'll "arrive".
All 18 super-influencers will get three different versions of the cards. Six of those influencers will proceed to destructively tear down the cards, shoot them with rifles, or catch them on fire... for "clicks". Three influencers will give their cards away in some sort of...
Oh I read this and I think - the consumer GPU division is dead
Yeah, possibly, and we could possibly, depending on which generation, we could also bring the latest generation AI technology to the previous generation GPUs, and that will require a fair amount of engineering, but it’s also within...
this forum is full of addicts - my money is on most of you self-exercising a kidney while laying in a bathtub of ice to get your hands on one before the subsequent Ti respins hit the market
I have a hard time getting into most CRPGs as well. Turn by turn game play just feels so slow and I get bored, and if you try to play it in real-time the mechanics are so complex (because they assume you are playing turn by turn) that I can't keep up. Dragon Age did an ok job finding a middle...
Nice naming convention ... to hint that they will let you use this with current gen cards, while holding back 5.0 to ... whatever is next that you won't be able to afford.
I mean, not that I'm bitter about arbitrarily locking proprietary software features behind a hardware paywall or anything.
Becomes less and less relevant every day. Really only necessary for legacy compatibility any more... and if you are leveraging AI/Compute, it's probably not with something written in Cobol compiled for 80386 architecture
I know for my use case, I keep an x86 around for only two reasons:
-- I do...
I can't even figure out how you would pronounce that
Arrow - mine - um ?
Arrow - min - um ?
doesn't exactly sound right
A - row - me - num ?
Not sure you can stretch Arrow to A-row, but maybe this is it?
Arrow - mini - um would have at least sounded like a metal
six of these bad boys and a willingness to mcguyver the wiring harness
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07QVXXGVR/?tag=thefpsreview-20
there is a hall effect version as well if you are worried about the shunt resistor, but it won't be nearly as accurate...
I peaked at it, saw the reviews, and slowly backed away.
Looks like it ~could~ be promising but not sure it's promising enough for me to want to light up what amounts to a subscription fee for a single player game.
I don't think an adapter can fix a current imbalance issue.
You can make an adapter that normalizes the current coming from the PSU... but the card itself is still gonna pull unbalanced across the pins: and that's where all the failures seem to be happening. To fix the imbalance on the pins...