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Specs Don't Matter: TechPowerUp Poll on GTX 970 Controversy

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In the thick of the GeForce GTX 970 memory controversy, last Thursday (29/01), TechPowerUp asked its readers on its front-page poll, if the developments of the week affected the way they looked at the card. The results are in, and our readers gave a big thumbs-up to the card, despite the controversy surrounding its specs.

In one week since the poll went up, and at the time of writing, 7,312 readers cast their votes. A majority of 61.4 percent (4,486 votes) says that the specs of the GTX 970 don't matter, as long as they're getting the kind of performance on tap, for its $329.99 price. A sizable minority of 21.2 percent (1,553 votes) are unhappy with NVIDIA, and said they won't buy the GTX 970, because NVIDIA lied about its specs. 9.3 percent had no plans to buy the GTX 970 to begin with. Interestingly, only 5.1 percent of the respondents are fence-sitters, and waiting for things to clear up. What's even more interesting is that the lowest number of respondents, at 3 percent (219 votes), said that they're returning their GTX 970 cards on grounds of false-marketing. The poll data can be accessed here.



View at TechPowerUp Main Site
 
Too bad the law doesn`t see it that way. It was false advertising. If they would sacrifice a little more of their profit and left those parts enabled and active (you know usable) they could avoid that.
 
When i voted the majority was set on not buying the 970 or returning theirs, how did it did change so dramatically?
 
3.5GB is fine since it's not a 4K capable card anyway.
 
If I use 970 I wouldn't bother returning the card as well.
 
3.5GB is fine since it's not a 4K capable card anyway.

It is very much a 4k capable card in SLI. So no 3.5gb is not "fine"
 
I was waiting for the next 970/3.5gb/etc thread, and now it looks like TPU is trolling all of us :roll:
 
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Interesting numbers and very revealing.
If you look at the number of people who are satisfied with the GTX 970 or will be buying it. It's a few percentage points down, but it does echo a little with NVIDIA's market share at around the 60 to 64% mark. Not sure if this is coincidence or there's more to it, but perhaps a vocal minority vs a buying majority. Who knows?
 
Who cares! These cards are going to be dirt cheap the moment Win 10 hits cause everyone is going to be dumping them for DX12 boards.
 
If your government did that you guys would not give it a second thought, but for a video card omg the world is ending:rolleyes:
 
Who cares! These cards are going to be dirt cheap the moment Win 10 hits cause everyone is going to be dumping them for DX12 boards.
These are DX12 cards which is the cool part.
 
If your government did that you guys would not give it a second thought, but for a video card omg the world is ending:rolleyes:
What do you mean IF? :roll::roll::roll:
 
The fact still remains nvidia was deceptive with the GTX970 specs, as much as the card delivers I will not buy or recommend the particular card to any of my clients. Anyway i personally don't like cut-down cards.

On that note it seems nvidia will be skipping 16nm in favor of 14nm Samsung, either way waiting for a die shrink then I'll purchase my next GPU, I have personally had enough of the 28nm GPUs.
 
I answered "No plans to buy GTX 970". Next time I will remember not to be honest with a TPU poll concerning Nvidia, because in the end the poll will be used to twist reality. I should have posted "I'm returning mine" even not having a 970.
 
Tottaaalllyyy Damage Controulller by TPU.com :)... since that poll can be done anonymously, hell yeah, you know what I mean..
 
It is very much a 4k capable card in SLI. So no 3.5gb is not "fine"
Actually it's not. 970 SLI won't be maxing any demanding game at 4K.
 
I answered "No plans to buy GTX 970". Next time I will remember not to be honest with a TPU poll concerning Nvidia, because in the end the poll will be used to twist reality. I should have posted "I'm returning mine" even not having a 970.

So poll results that don't correspond with your conception is "twisting reality"? Do you know how stupid you sound?

For me the most important thing about this "controversy" is that it's shown up who are the nVidia haters and/or morons who don't understand, or refuse to understand, how graphics cards work. Those of us who own GTX 970s, and are perfectly happy with them, are thankful for the amusement you've given us.
 
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All I want to say is those that relentlessly accuse TPU of being an Nvidia shill really ought to find a new forum.
By all means condemn Nvidia but the frankly infantile responses to democratic polls from generally AMD owners is ironically a neon sign post to Red bias.
AMD in context sold the stock 290 cards that were unable to stay at their PR advertised boosts. In many cases they throttled well below 1ghz. I don't recall quite so much hate or as many posts on that misleading sales pitch.
It took custom solutions, months later to let the cards fly free.
I wouldn't touch a 970 knowing the issue and knowing my gaming resolution would maybe in a small % of games cause problems. But it doesn't mean I need to pour such illogical hatred and conspiracy on TPU.
And 'specs don't matter' is a valid point. My 3gb cards outperform 4gb cards, even at some 4k settings. Game coding is more relevant to performance in many cases.
Have Nvidia been dishonest? Of course.
Does the card still suit the vast majority of owners? Apparently.
Should Nvidia do something honest about it? Yes.
Will they? No.
Will I still buy Nvidia? If they still perform better than AMD, yes.
Even if its a tad expensive? Probably.
Would I buy AMD? If their card is better.

All very simple....
 
And now specs all of the sudden don't matter because NVIDIA fucked it up. If anyone else would, they'd literally eat them alive, not just make a small controversy outrage. They lied and they didn't bother to fix it in lets say a week or month. users had to point it out 4 months later. F U NVIDIA and your shitty business practices.

They are dishonest the entire time starting even with software things like PhysX where they hardcode, lockdown and block things that shouldn't be limited at all and then they act like it's our fault and that it's normal to be that way up to far more concerning things like this GTX 970 crap. I'm no fanboy of either camp, but when one side is continuously and repeatably dishonest like NVIDIA has been for several years now, I tend to buy from the other camp more. More people should think about this.
 
Tottaaalllyyy Damage Controulller by TPU.com :)... since that poll can be done anonymously, hell yeah, you know what I mean..

Why yes Rahmat, I think I do...

35c957bd9da29f3a420e5bf87abc1b561d590e8450e2e005fd3f1a271ee40539.jpg


/Didn't vote in the poll
 
So poll results that don't correspond with your conception is "twisting reality"? Do you know how stupid you sound?
I was reading polls for a month here in Greece and I know how you can twist the meaning of a poll even while presenting it. Also see what you are doing in your post. First you downgrade my opinion "that don't correspond with your conception", then you call me stupid. How nice.

For me the most important thing about this "controversy" is that it's shown up who are the nVidia haters and/or morons who don't understand, or refuse to understand, how graphics cards work. Those of us who own GTX 970s, and are perfectly happy with them, are thankful for the amusement you've given us.

More attacks because there where infidels among the voters who insulted your card? Really? You are funny.
 
If specs wouldn't matter, you wouldn't see them in literally every hardware review out there. Sure, some matter more than others. The fact of the matter is that when you pick a new graphics card and there are several choices regarding memory capacity, you're sure as hell not just going to roll dice on what to get (for those who remember 8800GTS 320MB versus 8800GTS 640MB).

If nVidia would have been honest from the start about the real specifications of the GTX 970, nobody would have given it a second thought. The card does perform admirably (and I don't mean just raw performance here) and for a pretty decent price. But for some reason, they decided to let this one slip and lie to everyone. And this has "marketing decision" written all over it.

The 3.5GB "direct access" memory amount would seem to suggest a 224-bit bus, which wouldn't be anything new for nVidia (they had quite a few cards in the past that used atypical memory bus configurations). But someone in the marketing department probably looked at it and said "hey, they'll probably think a 256-bit bus is barely enough, they'll never buy a card with a 224-bit bus". And lo and behold, they slapped on the card the full amount of memory chips for a 4GB card and declared it as having a fully functional 256-bit bus, when in reality the core has a lower number of ROPs and whatever else than the GTX 980.

How many people would have minded about the GTX 970 having a different configuration for its memory and memory bus? Maybe a few. They'd probably complain about it on the forums and whatnot (like they always do, let's face it), but at the end of the day, it would have been a matter of you get what you pay for. If you want more, you pay more. Nothing to see here, move along.

Right now, however, they have people returning purchased cards on account of false advertising. Quite a few people are miffed about being lied to, and rightly so. I don't find false advertising something that is so easily forgivable. After all, what would happen if you, as a customer, would say you want to buy one of these cards, but would only pay less than the asking price at the cash register? What would happen then?
 
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