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Докладване на проблем с превода
People DO have review editions early, like for 2 weeks already.
However it's hard to get any 3rd party GPU editions early. I was able to but by the time it reaches me, it will be very close to Jan 30 anyways. I've already know some people that got their NVIDIA FE 5080 or 5090 early. Usually for review perhaps and once finished they have to send the card back. NVIDIA does this for a select few people upon a request process approx 1 month prior to release to general public so that reviews are all ready before the cards officially come out. Stores that were able to buy some to stock would generally get them 1 week prior to actual release.
But my 5080 will be kept for personal use so I don't want the FE. Instead got MSI Vanguard.
Correct. So why consider buying and RTX 5000 card, with the promise of a feature which is important in relation to important to the main heavily promoted feature (frame generation).
As or the 5000 series, I am curious about the possible RTX 5060 ti 16GB.
It is not for the DLSS frame generation.
New AMD card are out shortly, and are curious about them.
They typically have decent VRAM amount. Also AFMF2, which can work with any game.
The downside is poor ray tracing performance.
Ideally you should play game without frame generation, but it is there if needed.
Then just wait for pricing to drop later on; they WILL come out with more cards, you can bank on that.
Perhaps just wait until 5070 Ti 16GB comes down. Otherwise jump on a 16GB RTX 40 card.
It seems like progress would look like: less power, smaller die, more powerful, less expensive.
I feel this way about cars too. It seems like cars should be mechanically simpler now than they were in the past. Fewer parts, less expensive, more efficient. That would be progress. That's how progress works in programming, isn't it? The more elegant your code, the smaller and less bloated it is, the more concise it is -- that's technical progress.
These cards may as well just be called 40100, 40110, and 40120 for all the newness in them.
I still want a 5070. Not going to lie.
There's hardware/architectural changes that allowed for multi-frame generation to be feasible. As long as they improve DLSS4 as far as latency with MFG, there's basically nothing to complain about, there's more to power efficiency than just TGP.
Not in any hurry to upgrade. For nvidia, the selling point of the RTX 5000 is the frame generation, but seems a problem without reflex 2 available at the same time.
My agenda is good value, with a some sort of so called 'future proofing'.
for GPUs, it seems a lot of VRAM determines how long they last. There a various types of up-scaling and frame generation to use.
Point taken.