$249 is arguably okay for an 8GB GPU. I'm a realist and low-end GPUs have rarely been burdened by the cost of surplus VRAM. A $249 lower-end GPU is not a long-term investment, nor is it a higher-end part that should expect to run new games with all the settings turned up, but I don't feel it's worthless, it's just definitely not worth $300 or more.
I suspect AMD will try and position it against the 5060 at $300, so I'm expecting a disappointing $279 MSRP and our brethren in the US will no doubt get scalped and tariffed to $400 or more, at which point it's another dumb purchase when 12GB and 16GB options exist for not much more.
I'm not going to continue debating this at length. SFF = low profile = half height. That's the way it's been for 25+ years and that's the way it's going to stay.
Ah yes, stubbornly stuck in the past as always. The official SFF-SIG is as defunct and obsolete as your argument.
The first page of results for "SFF PC" in Google is dominated (90% or so) by small mITX cases with SFX PSUs and compatibility with full-height, two-slot GPUs in varying lengths, typically 10.5" or so. There are a tiny handful of corporate SFFs from Dell/HP/Lenovo but their definition of SFF has moved to NUC/Thin clients using wholly proprietary form factors and lacking any expansion slots whatsoever.
The mATX/FlexATX SFF you're referring to as those corporate systems do still exist, and are still sold under the label of "SFF" alongside full-ATX sized workstations, but that's not representative of the entire SFF market, and judging from the limited number of offerings of that size compared to the fully-integrated NUC/Thin Clients, they are a dying breed of wholly proprietary parts and even if you can theoretically shoehorn a <75W slot-powered graphics card into one of those systems, there's a good chance that neither the power supply nor the case ventilation are adequate for such a thing.
You're always very keen in discussions to point out the relevance of
context in your arguments, and in the context of a thread about the 9060XT 8GB - a consumer gaming card for the AIB/DIY market - there's no valid argument for trying to shoehorn an old definition of SFF limited to proprietary corporate PCs that are designed for a limited selection of upgrade parts from that same OEM, sometimes even firmware-locked to that limited selection of upgrade parts.
Low-profile is SFF, in that aspect you are correct.
SFF is not
exclusively low-profile, and hasn't been for a long time, even in the corporate SFF world, so it's time to stop beating that particular drum.