Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yea. They need a third party to blame when their shit fucks up.At this point, do GPU Makers even need AIB partners?
They will slowly die as Nvidia keeps fucking them out of existence (EVGA) and AMD moves to mega APUs. But they are with us for the immediate future.At this point, do GPU Makers even need AIB partners?
Makes sense. I can def see the UDNA APU making the 60 series class and below pointless once UDNA hits as it's easier to have a 10600X/10600 combo chip for a budget/casual tier gamer than a 10600X and a 10600 discrete GPU here.They will slowly die as Nvidia keeps fucking them out of existence (EVGA) and AMD moves to mega APUs. But they are with us for the immediate future.
An early leak of Zen 6 desktop "CPUs" (not desktop APUs) has some of them including up to 8 CUs RDNA4 (way up from the 2 CUs RDNA2 they have currently). I guess if fully enabled that could outperform the 8600G, maybe not the 8700G. It might not happen but it's something to look out for. They will also be pricier and faster CPUs than casuals actually need.Makes sense. I can def see the UDNA APU making the 60 series class and below pointless once UDNA hits as it's easier to have a 10600X/10600 combo chip for a budget/casual tier gamer than a 10600X and a 10600 discrete GPU here.
Intel still holds about 75% of the desktop CPU market. AMD can't afford to cut its TAM for its low-end GPUs down to exclusively AMD all-in-one machines.I can def see the UDNA APU making the 60 series class and below pointless
Presumably we'll be getting super refreshes with the new 3GB modules a year or two down the line.Is the Blackwell GPU released finished or do they still have one more GPU to drop in the bucket past the50505060?
At least for me, can confirm on that. Last three machines (one for me, two for others) I've built have been Intel rigs, and my laptop is Intel. My work is also filled to the brim with Intel. Despite the recent hiccups, Intel is still perceived as reliable, and for the most part, they are. Personally I have no gripes with my 12900K.Intel still holds about 75% of the desktop CPU market. AMD can't afford to cut its TAM for its low-end GPUs down to exclusively AMD all-in-one machines.
Not for the last two generations. Rust inside, indeed.Intel is still perceived as reliable
On one hand yes. On the other, a guy just buying a work laptop from Walmart doesn't know that. He's replacing the laptop hes has for 5 years that was probably another Intel with another Intel, because it's what he knows. And generally it's going to be faster than what he used to have, so he's happy.Not for the last two generations. Rust inside, indeed.
Similarly, I care about the Intel CPUs when I can find the entire (dGPUless) Intel rig for ~$100 in the bargain bin, like I did for my current one. AMD doesn't make it into such deals typically because they don't have the volume. HP will put some 8000Gs into prebuilts but you probably won't see them under $300. Corporate PCs almost always have Intel. At least AMD is putting an iGPU in desktop CPUs now.It's because the bulk of desktop CPUs are bought by enterprises, and nobody at the enterprise level cares that a Core Ultra 285k can't hit 200 fps in Cyberpunk. They care what kind of bulk deal Dell is giving them on laptops and workstations, and Dell cares what kind of bulk deal they get on chips from Intel. What hurts Intel the most with Dell are things like Meteor Lake being late and performance-segment 14th gens blowing up.
tl;dr: Used GPU > 5060ti on pricing.Similarly, I care about the Intel CPUs when I can find the entire (dGPUless) Intel rig for ~$100 in the bargain bin, like I did for my current one. AMD doesn't make it into such deals typically because they don't have the volume. HP will put some 8000Gs into prebuilts but you probably won't see them under $300. Corporate PCs almost always have Intel. At least AMD is putting an iGPU in desktop CPUs now.
Videocardz: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 Ti Graphics Cards Review Roundup
Tom's Hardware: Nvidia GeForce RTX 5060 Ti 16GB review: More VRAM and a price 'paper cut' could make for a compelling GPU
Phoronix: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 5060 Ti Linux GPU Compute Benchmarks
TechPowerUp: ASUS GeForce RTX 5060 Ti Prime OC 16 GB Review
tl;dr: Used GPU > 5060ti on pricing.