Seems like people are paranoid over TLOU benchmark that indicates "8GB cards are dead" despite the extreme low 1% case only appears on ultra settings (I'm talking bout 3070 ofc). On high settings, 3070 could play that game relatively well.
Yeah, more vram is better but again it will drive up...
Yeah, 6500XT was the neutered one. Not only it lacks PCIe bandwidth at gen 3, but the memory is also constrained by it's 4GB 64 bit with around 144GB/s bandwidth.
To put that into perspective, RX 580 had 256GB/s bandwidth and double the VRAM available to the GPU.
So this is why AMD holding back the non-X skus from being released at the same time as their X-skus.
Non-X Ryzen 5000 was released way later in 2022 instead of 2020. Not to mention a bizarre decision to release Zen 2 based SKUs in 2022.
Yes, it won't be a smooth journey for Intel. As AMD and Nvidia before it, it was some grueling and painful journey to get where they are now.
But you have to start somewhere, and right now I don't think Intel is doing "that badly". Again, it isn't like AMD or Nvidia just came out in like 2-3...
"The Kioxia Exceria SATA uses the SATA 6 Gbps interface. It is compatible with any older SATA standard, but will in such a case work at reduced performance."
Huh? Is this Kioxia one or Teamgroup one?
Yeah budget alder lakes (12400F and below) were quite cheap (neck in neck) compared to zen 3s. But decent B660 is so expensive compared to B550s on the market.
Damn, I just want to believe Intel could finally enter dgpu market. Yes, it's not going to be a smooth sailing ride especially when your competitor has been in it like, idk 20+ years?
I was expecting their 1st product to have flaws here and there, and I could reason with that. But killing this...
System requirements for NVIDIA's GeForce Now are as stands:
15 Mbps internet connection (25 Mbps recommended). A 5GHz network is preferred if using wireless.
me in a 3rd World country :