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Nvidia won, we all lost

(blog.sebin-nyshkim.net)
977 points todsacerdoti | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.279s | source
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leakycap ◴[] No.44468256[source]
This article goes much deeper than I expected, and is a nice recap of the last few years of "green" gpu drama.

Liars or not, the performance has not been there for me in any of my usecases, from personal to professional.

A system from 2017/2018 with an 8700K and an 8GB 2080 performs so closely to the top end, expensive systems today that it makes almost no sense to upgrade at MSRP+markup unless your system is older than this.

Unless you need specific features only on more recent cards, there are very few use cases I can think of needing more than a 30 series card right now.

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theshackleford ◴[] No.44470650[source]
> A system from 2017/2018 with an 8700K and an 8GB 2080 performs so closely to the top end, expensive systems today

This is in no way true and is quite an absurd claim. Unless you meant for some specific isolated purposed restricted purely to yourself and your performance needs.

> there are very few use cases I can think of needing more than a 30 series card right now.

How about I like high refresh and high resolutions? I'll throw in VR to boot. Which are my real use cases. I use a high refresh 4K display and VR, both have benefited hugely from my 2080Ti > 4090 Shift.

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Der_Einzige ◴[] No.44473607[source]
I have this exact CPU sans a 3090 (I started with 2080 but upgraded due to local AI needs). 8700k is perfectly fine for todays workloads. CPUs have stagnated and also the amount of RAM in systems has too (Apple still macbook air defaults of 8 GB in 2025??????)
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1. ◴[] No.44474141[source]