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by AnthonyMouse
545 days ago
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> If I can save someone else from wasting $100,000 on hardware and six months of their life then my post has done more good than the AMD marketing department ever will. This seems like unuseful advice if you've already given up on them. You tried it and at some point in the past it wasn't ready. But by not being ready they're losing money, so they have a direct incentive to fix it. Which would take a certain amount of time, but once you've given up you no longer know if they've done it yet or not, at which point your advice would be stale. Meanwhile the people who attempt it apparently seem to get acquired by Nvidia, for some strange reason. Which implies it should be a worthwhile thing to do. If they've fixed it by now which you wouldn't know if you've stopped looking, or they fix it in the near future, you have a competitive advantage because you have access to lower cost GPUs than your rivals. If not, but you've demonstrated a serious attempt to fix it for everyone yourself, Nvidia comes to you with a sack full of money to make sure you don't finish, and then you get a sack full of money. That's win/win, so rather than nobody doing it, it seems like everybody should be doing it. |
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I've seen people try it every six months for two decades now.
At some point you just have to accept that AMD is not a serious company, but is a second rate copycat and there is no way to change that without firing everyone from middle management up.
I'm deeply worried about stagnation in the CPU space now that they are top dog and Intel is dead in the water.
Here's hoping China and Risk V save us.
>Meanwhile the people who attempt it apparently seem to get acquired by Nvidia
Everyone I've seen base jumping has gotten a sponsorship from redbull, ergo. everyone should basejump.
Ignore the red smears around the parking lot.