- Joined
- Mar 31, 2023
- Messages
- 150 (0.20/day)
Getting my bias out of the way first - I've been Nvidia-free and Intel-free where I can be since 2012. Beyond my trusty EVGA 750 Ti SC I have hated Nvidia's offerings, especially drivers. Make no mistake I definitely didn't have a smooth road going full AMD thanks to getting unlucky on 2 different ryzen cpus, those being first-gen first batch 1600 which had zero room to run anything beyond stock anything and even then was still unstable, and a 3700X that occasionally lost/regained an entire core between reboots. This isn't about CPUs but I wont deny there have been times I've had issues.
I work in Quality Assurance at a game publisher, where my expertise and more realistically my pile of hardware gets utilized across a number of workloads usually performance comparisons or encode/decode because recording and stuff is always needed somewhere along the line. Having my hands in AMD, Intel and Nvidia for CPUs and GPUs and accounting for what's going on in production environments, I've seen a lot of weird things, like 4090-exclusive bugs in editors and people trying to run a GPU with 512MB of vram on a game needing minimum 4GB. Comparing these side by side, seeing what breaks or what doesn't (lookin at you Oculus) or what we can or cant control, I find AMD just does what it's told without really fighting back. Nvidia on the other hand I find fights back or hand holds in ways that I really wish it wouldn't. Intel Arc is doing pretty well in my tests on these games and it makes me smile which honestly surprises me a ton because the machine at work we test it in doesn't have resizable BAR support until I update the bios and well, I did something funny to it so I'm not sure if I could update it.
At this point in time I have 2 different 7900 XTX cards now. One being MBA (Sapphire specifically if it matters), and one being Yeston. With the exception of that defective vapor chamber on the first MBA card which I have since returned and replaced with another MBA, I have no issues with them at all. Cooling, hardware, capabilities, size and clearance, power draw, hell I even threw ZLUDA into it because I thought it was funny doing CUDA workloads on it. Of the complaints I have, it comes down to drivers as many end up pointing to. 24.1.1 had an issue that makes gpu usage compltely erratic until a reboot after playing a game so until that's fixed I'm chilling on the release right before it. Beyond that, I have not had much issue with any configurations, normal or unusual, overclocking or undervolting.
I wouldn't call RDNA3 unusable by any stretch. I would however say they should really not let some of those egregious issues with drivers through like that erratic usage. As for Intel though, I still plan to swear off on Intel CPUs, but Intel GPUs I am not at all opposed to so far. I got 2 of em already and am eagerly waiting to see where Battlemage brigns us.
I work in Quality Assurance at a game publisher, where my expertise and more realistically my pile of hardware gets utilized across a number of workloads usually performance comparisons or encode/decode because recording and stuff is always needed somewhere along the line. Having my hands in AMD, Intel and Nvidia for CPUs and GPUs and accounting for what's going on in production environments, I've seen a lot of weird things, like 4090-exclusive bugs in editors and people trying to run a GPU with 512MB of vram on a game needing minimum 4GB. Comparing these side by side, seeing what breaks or what doesn't (lookin at you Oculus) or what we can or cant control, I find AMD just does what it's told without really fighting back. Nvidia on the other hand I find fights back or hand holds in ways that I really wish it wouldn't. Intel Arc is doing pretty well in my tests on these games and it makes me smile which honestly surprises me a ton because the machine at work we test it in doesn't have resizable BAR support until I update the bios and well, I did something funny to it so I'm not sure if I could update it.
At this point in time I have 2 different 7900 XTX cards now. One being MBA (Sapphire specifically if it matters), and one being Yeston. With the exception of that defective vapor chamber on the first MBA card which I have since returned and replaced with another MBA, I have no issues with them at all. Cooling, hardware, capabilities, size and clearance, power draw, hell I even threw ZLUDA into it because I thought it was funny doing CUDA workloads on it. Of the complaints I have, it comes down to drivers as many end up pointing to. 24.1.1 had an issue that makes gpu usage compltely erratic until a reboot after playing a game so until that's fixed I'm chilling on the release right before it. Beyond that, I have not had much issue with any configurations, normal or unusual, overclocking or undervolting.
I wouldn't call RDNA3 unusable by any stretch. I would however say they should really not let some of those egregious issues with drivers through like that erratic usage. As for Intel though, I still plan to swear off on Intel CPUs, but Intel GPUs I am not at all opposed to so far. I got 2 of em already and am eagerly waiting to see where Battlemage brigns us.