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by Gh0stRAT 912 days ago
There's a quote that I love:

>I'm a great believer in luck. The harder I work, the more of it I seem to have.

Nvidia has been working hard(er than their competition) on the software side for almost 2 decades to be in the position they find themselves today. 16 years ago, they released CUDA for general-purpose computing on GPUs, and then 9 years ago they followed that up with cuDNN. They have a consistent pattern of making a intentional, long-term bets to diversify their market exposure and unlock new product areas while building a software ecosystem moat.

Yes, they obviously got super lucky with the cryptocurrency frenzy, but there's a reason all the miners were mostly buying Nvidia cards instead of AMD cards.

1 comments

The miners were buying both Nvidia and AMD I think?
Yes, they bought any supply they could get their hands on. Also, it's not true that Nvidia cards were generally better for (Eth) mining. The Radeon VII for example outclassed Nvidia cards sold at the same time. It's just that Nvidia was able to supply more cards, since they had won the bigger gaming marketshare a while ago and thus were producing more.
Yeah, I'm going to be honest: I'm a cryptocurrency doomer so I've not followed things super closely, but a quick Google search turned up this article[0] from 2022:

>While it is true that Nvidia cards are generally preferred by miners due to better price-to-performance, AMD GPUs such as the Radeon RX 6600 XT could still be mined on profitably until recently. […] So yes, carefully consider the condition of all used graphics cards—Nvidia or AMD.

[0] https://www.pcworld.com/article/395149/should-you-buy-a-used...