![]() AMD shares finished up 0.4% at $57.85, while Meta shares declined 0.8% to close at $127.50. Intel shares - also under scrutiny due to a report the chip maker might lay off thousands near when it reports earnings this month - rose 1.2% to close at $25.33, while Nvidia shares declined 0.8%, finishing at $115.00. In other gaming hardware releases, Facebook parent Meta Platforms Inc.Īnnounced on Tuesday its $1,499 Quest Pro virtual-reality headset, available for pre-order and shipment on Oct. With Nvidia, AMD, and Intel all releasing gaming cards this fall, those prices may come down a bit, especially if PC sales continue to crater for their worst declines since the 1990s. 3, right after earnings are release on Nov. ![]() Radeon product division teased in a tweet that the company is scheduled to announce its new line of RX 7000 gaming cards Nov. Meanwhile, the head of Advanced Micro Devices Inc.’s See also: Chip stocks could suffer worst year ever as effects of shortage-turned-glut spread Nvidia’s latest inroads into someone else’s turf is its Grace line of CPUs, built on Arm Ltd.’s architecture rather than x86. Intel’s - years-ago-unthinkable - David-versus-Goliath approach to the company that invented the graphics-processing unit, or GPU, comes at a time when Nvidia is trying to siphon off some market share from Intel, the company now headed by Pat Gelsinger, who literally helped create x86 architecture central processing units, which has been standard for decades. ![]() ![]() While Nvidia is catering to the bleeding-edge gamer, Intel is appealing to the more mainstream gamer with claims the A770 outperforms Nvidia’s previous generation RTX 3060 card. 12, the same day Nvidia had said it would release the RTX 4090. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang explained that Moore’s law no longer applied to gaming cards and that silicon was “a ton more expensive.”Īt the end of September, the week after Nvidia announced its next-generation RTX 4000-series of cards using the “Ada Lovelace” chip architecture, succeeding the RTX 3000-series of cards that used Ampere architecture, IntelĪnnounced it would be releasing its Arc A770 gaming card starting at $329 on Oct. For gamers used to the predictability of Moore’s Law and the convention that gaming cards be similarly priced to the models they were replacing, that bump in price came as a bit of an unpleasant surprise. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |