Quote from: ClippyCasual on July 10, 2017, 03:26:16
If it is indeed not binned then I see no problem with them charging the same price of these cards as normal ones. The manufacturing and material cost as well as the theoretical performance (excluding clocks and power limits) are the same between Max-Q and normal chips. If NVIDIA is to be taken at its word, there was probably additional cost for these Max-Q cost in the form of the R&D for whatever thermals - meaning the cost could be higher than normal chips.
It's up to the buyer to decide whether or not to fork over same or higher amount of moolah for a lower powered/lower thermal card.
Quote from: D2ultima on July 10, 2017, 00:28:34If it is indeed not binned then I see no problem with them charging the same price of these cards as normal ones. The manufacturing and material cost as well as the theoretical performance (excluding clocks and power limits) are the same between Max-Q and normal chips. If NVIDIA is to be taken at its word, there was probably additional cost for these Max-Q cost in the form of the R&D for whatever thermals - meaning the cost could be higher than normal chips.Quote from: ClippyCasual on July 10, 2017, 00:02:35
While I agree that naming the new cards something other than Max-Q would more or less be appropriate, the marketing of the cards as Max-Q is probably to avoid the old 'gaming on laptop' stigma that comes with using a GTX 780M or such.
I don't agree with a price reduction in the Max-Q card simply because it is underclocked and underpowered (hear me out); I think a price reduction is in order for another reason. At the end of the day, these cards still cost the same to make and have exactly the same manufacturing process except for the voltage and clocks. But Max-Q 1080 chips are probably poorly performing chips compared to full fat 1080s, so they were binned as low performance. Every batch of chips made will have high performing and low performing, hence the difference in overclocking, but my guess is that the Max-Q chips are the worst of the batch which are normally scrapped as they are unstable at normal boost clocks. Instead, NVIDIA decided to make some money off of their low performance by way of their inherently low thermals. What they arte doing here is charging full price for low performing chips.
TL;DR Max-Q should be priced lower than normal chips, not because of lower performance, but because they are most likely binned bad chips.
Nvidia officially stated (it is quoted in the article) that these chips were in no way binned.
Quote from: ClippyCasual on July 10, 2017, 00:02:35
While I agree that naming the new cards something other than Max-Q would more or less be appropriate, the marketing of the cards as Max-Q is probably to avoid the old 'gaming on laptop' stigma that comes with using a GTX 780M or such.
I don't agree with a price reduction in the Max-Q card simply because it is underclocked and underpowered (hear me out); I think a price reduction is in order for another reason. At the end of the day, these cards still cost the same to make and have exactly the same manufacturing process except for the voltage and clocks. But Max-Q 1080 chips are probably poorly performing chips compared to full fat 1080s, so they were binned as low performance. Every batch of chips made will have high performing and low performing, hence the difference in overclocking, but my guess is that the Max-Q chips are the worst of the batch which are normally scrapped as they are unstable at normal boost clocks. Instead, NVIDIA decided to make some money off of their low performance by way of their inherently low thermals. What they arte doing here is charging full price for low performing chips.
TL;DR Max-Q should be priced lower than normal chips, not because of lower performance, but because they are most likely binned bad chips.
Quote from: QEXdu35dv on July 05, 2017, 13:18:06No, from day 1 the 1080N has cost $1200 USD. The 980N cost about the same. The 980M was about $720, with the g-sync variants being $750 or so.
Isn't the price of the chips inflated by the demand for them in desktop GPUs due to the mining craze though?
I'm sure people will wise up to the fact that the mobile cards are no longer near their desktop namesakes with time.