Quote from: Glegster on June 15, 2022, 21:40:07Oddly i can get a 3060 under 450 usd... your price quotes for all the gpu's are a little highI can get a 3060 for around $350 without VAT but that doesn't mean it's the same everywhere. And importing might not be attractive (taxes, tariffs, hassle, warranty, shipping costs).
Quote from: 3000seriesPriceAreTooMuch on June 13, 2022, 10:52:56The price of 3000 series at my country are still too high!!!!
At the cheapset
3060 700$
3060 ti 850$
3070 1147$
3080 1780$
3090 3300$
Quote from: RobertJasiek on June 15, 2022, 10:11:07Hence, there should be consumer GPUs for both demands: low TDP / moderate noise versus as fast as possible.And we can assume there will be a 4060 or 4050 and perhaps even something lower if they really do inflate TDPs across the board. 3060 is already at 170 W (Ti at 200).
Quote from: RobertJasiek on June 14, 2022, 07:45:24I am at a loss to understand why apparently Nvidia chases AMD to let 4080 have ca. 420W and 4070 ca. 300W according to currently rumours instead of simply decreasing TDP and / or moderately increasing speed.I don't know what's going on in the GeForce market. In the server market, there is demand for density. So, package power will go up. If you make a die larger (or you combine multiple dies), you will need more power. And of course, it's a valid strategy to pump power in in order to push frequency up. It's up to the market to decide whether that makes sense, where is the limit. If there are people who will accept such power draws (and we know there are some; remember quad SLI?), the market is there and it's valid that Nvidia might compete for it. The only question is whether it's big enough. Increasing your power budget is one way towards higher performance, if more performance is what you want. If your budget is fixed, then performance gains only come from efficiency gains. Sometimes, it's enough; other times, you can stall.
Quote from: RobertJasiek on June 13, 2022, 18:39:02Nvidia's massive TDP increments might spoil it again. 4070 with about 300W would still be ok but some rumours say 330 to even 400W - clearly too much.What really matters is efficiency. If a big jump in energy demand is accompanied with corresponding jump in performance which you don't need, just buy something lower down the ladder. So, even a 500 W 4070 could be acceptable. It would just be too powerful for you. If push comes to shove, reduce boost, avoid overclocking, tune it for efficiency.
Quote from: Hardware Geek on June 13, 2022, 16:09:35I do hope that prices in the RTX 3000 series drop below MSRP and availability becomes much better. That's about the limit of what I'm willing to have for power draw. I expect both of the next generation to have much higher power draws. I'm just not interested in having a computer that uses that much power. I'll wait until the next couple of generations come out and upgrade again when I can get noticeable improvements in picture with the same power or less.