Monday, September 15th 2008

New GeForce GTX 260 Could Lead to Overstock of Older GTX 260

Bad news for the manufacturers, possible good news for consumers. NVIDIA revised the GeForce GTX 260 (D10U-102) graphics processor (GPU) in an attempt to stamp performance superiority over the Radeon HD 4870. While from a technical standpoint there are mixed views about this move, with some suggesting the performance leads aren't significant over its older version, while others finding it a good move with potential for more performance gains with tweaks and overclocking, it cannot be denied that for the new GTX 260 to fit into the market, there are some tough maths are at play.

The new GPU will certainly affect the prices of products across the segment, including those of the older GTX 260. If the GTX 260 gets a significantly lower price compared to the newer version or if this gets a significantly higher price, it could affect the sales of either products, and profits in general for manufacturers. Concerns over the new GPU causing over-stocking of the older GPU-based products loom at large, reports industry observer DigiTimes. Overstock is a condition where demand for a product is much lower or on a decline in relation to the supply. If such a situation arises where the D10U-102 sells much better than the older GTX 260 which is in good stock, manufacturers could be forced to sell the older cards at lower prices, as that is a common reaction to overstock commodities. Expect great prices caused not due to inter-brand competition, but intra-brand competition.
Source: DigiTimes
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36 Comments on New GeForce GTX 260 Could Lead to Overstock of Older GTX 260

#26
candle_86
ZubasaAlso the fact that nVidia produced what? Four cards named 8800GTS?:banghead:
yes and no

The 320 and 640 where identical cards, it would be like saying the 8800GT 256, 512, and 1024 are diffrent 8800GT's lol


There was
8800GTS 640/320 96sp
8800GTS 640 112sp
8800GTS 512 128sp
Posted on Reply
#27
Bjorn_Of_Iceland
Changing the name to reflect architectural differences is something that MOST companies do without a second thought. Why nVidia refuses to is just disgusting to me...
amen to that.
Posted on Reply
#28
Zubasa
candle_86yes and no

The 320 and 640 where identical cards, it would be like saying the 8800GT 256, 512, and 1024 are diffrent 8800GT's lol


There was
8800GTS 640/320 96sp
8800GTS 640 112sp
8800GTS 512 128sp
They are the same card in a way, but the memory size do make them different.:respect:
And... You get the point anyways.
Posted on Reply
#29
DaedalusHelios
SilverelI like to advocate for the uninformed. Too many times have I gone into a BB or CC and heard their sales guys pushing crap into the hands of their customers. I take every chance I get to pull them aside before they pay for stuff and let them in on the real deal. There's no complaints for us, we all know the difference. However, there's tons of people that stop by the site asking questions just like this. Gamers that don't follow tech, and just want the best deal. The shouldn't be ripped off over and over again. Changing the name to reflect architectural differences is something that MOST companies do without a second thought. Why nVidia refuses to is just disgusting to me... :shadedshu
We don't even have new graphics cards at my Best buy. They stock AGP and regular PCI garbage. They sell pci-express 8800gs's for $220 etc. Its robbery no matter what card you pick at BB. :(

Our Circuit City doesn't carry any graphics cards, perhaps its because we are in the south?
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#30
Darkrealms
Here in Oregon our CC only has a few graphics cards and only a couple of brands. I didn't see a single 9xxx, GTX, and only one 4850 card. . .

I agree with changing something to identify the cards, a GTX265 would have been fine.

But like I had said earlier. It doesn't matter to me because my cheaper SLI'd old GTX260's will make me happy when the prices drop : )
Posted on Reply
#31
Wile E
Power User
DarkrealmsHere in Oregon our CC only has a few graphics cards and only a couple of brands. I didn't see a single 9xxx, GTX, and only one 4850 card. . .

I agree with changing something to identify the cards, a GTX265 would have been fine.

But like I had said earlier. It doesn't matter to me because my cheaper SLI'd old GTX260's will make me happy when the prices drop : )
Hell, even GTX260+ would be acceptable.
Posted on Reply
#32
3870x2
wolf2009agreed
Disagreed. Make a huge monster 20lb card that takes up the whole case, so long as it is fast and can get 15k+ 3d marks!!!
Posted on Reply
#35
Hayder_Master
nvidia remind me by Scorpio , when the young's new born they kill them mother
Posted on Reply
#36
PennySavre
The only 216 shader cards I've seen being sold so far are that one on Newegg for $300. Anyone know of any better deals?
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