Sammy
Exhibits no Islamic behavior once given McNuggets
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kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2014
To be fair, I suspect the real money is in the industrial, commercial, and data centre markets. Their Quadro and Tesla line of cards (which use the same chips and similar PCBs to the standard GeForce cards, but with firmware optimised for CAD and/or large scale number crunching) go for huge prices, most of which is probably profit once the specialist grade firmware and driver development costs are taken into account. The difference in the firmware is that a "gaming" card will basically do calculations to a "good enough" level of precision and guess at things far in the distance before purging everything to start calculating the next frame, but one of these cards will do all the calculations to huge precision and in full every time. This is because when you're, say, designing a plane or a bridge or a building, there is no such thing as "good enough." You also pay for the support as well, like with professional-grade software.
Yeah I'd agree, back in muh college 3Din' days those Quadro cards were sweet if had the tuition funds leftover for one.
I couldn't say where the big bread for nVidia is made exactly, industrial is probably a good bet. It might be consumer market if the volume is high enough (we didn't hear much about their Quadro cards during the bitcoin mining bubble, did we?
