• I know it’s old and there are newer and better ones out now, but it really is a fantastic card. It’s served me well for a long time, and I guess it will have to continue doing so. Keep chugging little guy ❤︎

    • The only reason I upgraded my 1080TI was because I’m a huge dummy and got a really expensive monitor that only had HDMI 2.1 and no port. So my 1080TI couldn’t use gsync on it. So after overpaying for a monitor, I overpaid for a graphics card as well. Yay, sunk cost fallacy.

      My system kicks ass now, though. Still can barely play Jedi Survivor.

  •  ono   ( @ono@lemmy.ca ) 
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    911 months ago

    Increased sales volume should be bringing prices down, not up. Perhaps the real problem is that we need more production capacity?

    In the meantime, I’ll happily use an AMD card for gaming.

    • Limiting supply has the tendency to increase the price. There’s no incentive to significantly increase supply when they can milk it for all its worth and create increases in price between generations faster than inflation. Just look at the price increases after covid. Prices have come down slightly but there has been a permanent upward shift in GPU prices.

      •  ono   ( @ono@lemmy.ca ) 
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        11 months ago

        Just look at the price increases after covid.

        It’s not really an apples-to-apples comparison. Most of the things people continue buying at prices inflated by covid issues and corporate greed are things they need, like food. Graphics cards are more of a luxury.

        If GPU prices stay high, I simply won’t buy them. Even if I were to finally relent when my current one eventually dies, I would be buying them far less often than I otherwise would, meaning less profit for the sellers in the long term.

    • This sounds more like the prices would be going up because a new emerging hobby has a need for multiple extremely powerful GPUs the same way crypto mining did. That hobby just happens to be running AI at home instead of using cloud services. So there would be a drop in supply as a few hoarders snap up everything for that or to scalp at higher prices.

      They just literally can’t make them fast enough to keep prices stable against the shitty kinds of consumers.

    • Yes, the problem is production capacity, but it’s very difficult to get that capacity up and running. For example, Intel started building 2 factories in Ohio last year. They won’t be up and running until at least 2025.

      This stuff is complicated and nobody predicted the rise of covid, crypto currencies, or AI, or if they did nobody was convinced enough to dedicate potential billions of dollars to building capacity to capitalize on it.

  •  charles   ( @charles@lemmy.ca ) 
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    811 months ago

    Guess I’ll be hanging on to my 1060 for a bit longer… Been looking to upgrade for a while now but I just can’t justify the prices, especially in Canadian dollars.

    • You poor bastard. My GF has that GPU. The only game she can max out is the Sims (but that’s all she plays so it’s good enough for her.) the 1050ti can’t even handle Wallpaper Engine beyond 15 FPS.

  • I feel like this could be completely avoided if Nvidia would just make a reasonably priced, widely available specialized AI card with no video outputs or game features.

    Currently their cards geared towards AI are insanely priced and not very attractive with such a poor price/performance ratio vs relatively cheap gaming cards.

    • And all of their insanely over priced AI dedicated cards are selling out at max production, leading to record earnings for Nvidia.

      I wouldn’t expect they upset that apple cart until amd/intel force their hand.

  • How big do they think the AI market is going to be? It is not going to compete with the consumer demand for very long. Chips last for years, so once AI chip is purchased it will be in use until the next generation GPU arrives. So yes the initial purchase may be predominantly expensive AI chips that will make AMD and Nvidia a boatload of cash. But that is a finite market, and TSMC make a lot of chips. Chips for industry have always be at the forefront of the cash cow that is GPU and CPU sales. Intel is also making an entrance for the low end.

    I think I will be waiting a while. I have little interest in being gouged for no other reason than greed.

    • Yeah they’re nuts if they think consumer grade graphics cards are of any use to anyone seriously dealing with ai.

      The biggest thing holding back cards right now, even the 4090 is vram. AI needs a ton of it, especially if you’re trying to train an AI.

      More than likely, the will be more demand for those 48 gig+ enterprise cards.

    • But AI begin to be a consumer product too. It’s no more just bots to help tech support, but products used by people (search in Bing with the help of ChatGPT, CoPilote from GitHub to help developers write code and so on). With increased usage it’ll need more GPU to calculate more answers. And I’m not sure which market is bigger.