Quote from: Alletheya on May 15, 2024, 19:27:04Well this is just first iteration,problems has to be solved ,the LPDDR6 Memory is expected to offer 17.066 MT/s LPDDR5X= 8.533 MT/s so from a workstation class i wouldn't expect/ buy anything less just to justify the purchase.
This is unrealistic given the fact that AMD had problems even with the 7500 memory soldered, at least.
The only thing that matters is increasing the bus bit rate; increasing frequencies is a losing strategy in advance.
For several years now, x86 should have a 256-bit bus in mass models and a 512-bit bus in top gaming and professional series.
And all igpus must come with at least 4GB soldered directly into the SoC gddr6x or hbm3+ chiplet. That's when igpu will really compete with dgpu.
What is the problem and prostration on the part of consumers? They see retail prices going from store to store at wild values (reaching hundreds of dollars for the same model, and the "discounts" are simply ridiculous and shameful, when they suddenly drop even $800-1000 - this is normal, so raise the MSRP to at the beginning for a product that is clearly not worth the money? Is this generally immoral against the backdrop of subsequent huge "discounts" in price), despite "market competition", Especially in third world countries, where competition is even worse even in retail, although This exists in Western countries, but buyers do not see the real cost of the laptop from the manufacturer. Seeing such wild variations in retail prices, a fairly experienced consumer rightly thinks that with such surges in retail prices, he has the right to expect additional improvements to be included in the cost of a product for which he is paying a clearly inflated price. Only by seeing the real cost of a laptop can a buyer correctly assess the manufacturer's ability to integrate more advanced technologies into the product.
Of course, "discounts" clearly indicate that there is no demand, but some still buy at an inflated price. Even though they have the money for it, they clearly do not get what they could at the start of sales if the price were more fair in relation to the quality and capabilities of the product, if the cost of the product was always proportional to the retail price.
When, conditionally, one buyer takes a model for $5,000 at the start of sales, and then with "discounts" another for $3,000, doesn't the first buyer have the right to expect proportionately greater quality and capabilities of the same product than the second buyer already for "3,000" ? And aren't such "discounts" essentially economic fraud? It turns out that the first buyer simply wasted $2,000 without receiving anything in return. There needs to be some balance and decency in this regard from the manufacturers. But of course the real world is somewhat different. Nothing but the thirst for profit and the search for "fools" with money.
I am for the retail price to be limited in the markup above the cost according to a certain formula. This also eliminates unnecessary speculators from the chain and does not allow manufacturers to engage in outright fraud when some buyers cannot correctly assess the real price of a product.
Well, at least look at what pharmaceutical companies are doing in the USA. If this is a "free market", why is even the Biden administration screaming at the top of its lungs that prices are obviously fraudulently inflated?