slippery
<Bronze Donator>
Linus has made it sound like they have a really poor relationship with NvidiaMore like "Did Linus and/or Steve show up at their house?"
Linus has made it sound like they have a really poor relationship with NvidiaMore like "Did Linus and/or Steve show up at their house?"
They treat everyone like shit, not just people that actively call them out.I think anyone that calls out Nividias bullshit has a poor relationship with them.
Well they were like the only choice for a while if you wanted high end. Now that AMD stepping shit up, its time to go AMD. And even Intel is coming along although they have a ways to go, eventually they will get there.And consumers keep buying, so they(either/or) don't really care.
And even Intel is coming along although they have a ways to go, eventually they will get there.
I give it a few years before Intel cancels the program.Intel did pretty bad, but again it was their first try. As consumers should hope they do good and be competitive. 3 good GPU makers are better then 2. We'll see how they do in a couple generations. Can't imagine the money and trial and error it takes to get going, or even come close to what the current two are making.
Possibly. I can only hope not, just for the sake of competition.I give it a few years before Intel cancels the program.
I give it a few years before Intel cancels the program.
I know this is probably full of copium and random plot holes - but I wouldnt have started the arc 750 at the price point they released. I would have made the margins razor thin (or a loss leader) and tried to get it down as close as I could to 150 bucks. I feel like it would completely reset the price of video cards in general - a lot more people would at least have a card thats as powerful as a 3060. By extension giving intel tons of new customers to their video line in order to perfect their software. Creating a point where customer and business alike will associate the intel name with a graphics card.I don't think so. For their first foray into the graphics card business, I think they did OK. I think Intel of all companies will get it right sooner than later. Lets just hope they make the smart business decisions to keep the program aloat.
This isnt their first though. They created a big discrete card back in 2010 or 2011 that ended up being a massive failure;For their first foray into the graphics card business
Intel has a long history of giving up on product lines that they spent a lot of money developing. Optane is the most recent. Further, the largest problem with the Arc is the drivers. Intel has had shit video drivers for as long as they've been making graphics chips, so I don't expect them to change. If we go by history alone, the Arc line of products better be sleeping with both eyes open.I don't think so. For their first foray into the graphics card business, I think they did OK. I think Intel of all companies will get it right sooner than later. Lets just hope they make the smart business decisions to keep the program aloat.
Intel doesn't do thin margins. They will give their usual giant discounts to oems like Dell and HP, though.I know this is probably full of copium and random plot holes - but I wouldnt have started the arc 750 at the price point they released. I would have made the margins razor thin (or a loss leader) and tried to get it down as close as I could to 150 bucks. I feel like it would completely reset the price of video cards in general - a lot more people would at least have a card thats as powerful as a 3060. By extension giving intel tons of new customers to their video line in order to perfect their software. Creating a point where customer and business alike will associate the intel name with a graphics card.
Intel releasing a card thats unproven and is missing software rich features that Nvidia has for only 40 bucks more in the 3060 just sounds dumb.
This isnt their first though. They created a big discrete card back in 2010 or 2011 that ended up being a massive failure;