Nvidia reportedly delays its RTX 3060 Ti launch until December 2nd

Nvidia is the biggest tech flop of this year, 4 launches in a couple of months and no stock to speak of and instead of taking it head on they cower back in a corner and remove sales from their own website because they can't be bothered to fight the issue with bots, even though they could easily afford to do it.


This card, being samsung 8nm i can't even take seriously because of the increased power consumption on the entire node, it's just a giant flop already.
 
I mean I wouldn't just say it's a flop, pretty much everyone is struggling to supply stock in a lot of tech areas.

PS5, Series X/S, Nvidia, AMD will likely have stock issues, Apples Iphone 12 having issues, and probably more.

Its such a random year that it has made future predictions of supply vs demand impossible to predict and anticipate that everyone is working at 100% production rates to catch up and its just impossible to keep up. Not to mention shipping products is also likely affected, which just means it takes longer to deliver the products that are made.
 
Nvidia is the biggest tech flop of this year, 4 launches in a couple of months and no stock to speak of and instead of taking it head on they cower back in a corner and remove sales from their own website because they can't be bothered to fight the issue with bots, even though they could easily afford to do it.


This card, being samsung 8nm i can't even take seriously because of the increased power consumption on the entire node, it's just a giant flop already.

I cannot see how a company that has created such a stupidly ridiculous high demand is considered a flop.

Supply is poor for sure, but when you look at the 20,000s preordered from one site alone, that to me is successful, once supply and demand are on par. The cards do perform well so im pretty sure as these cards go to their owners they will speak highly of them.

The company I see at as a flop now is Intel we know their failed attempts at lower nm nodes etc and they are still stuck at 14nm. Nvidia knew what they were doing, much like they knew what they were doing with the GTX970 controversey.

They could still tweak their products to battle AMD. Only those who own a card feel the disappointment which surprisingly.. is probably like 1% of all GPU owners globally right now.

I would say their practises are atrocious, but flop? far from it.
 
I cannot see how a company that has created such a stupidly ridiculous high demand is considered a flop.

Supply is poor for sure, but when you look at the 20,000s preordered from one site alone, that to me is successful, once supply and demand are on par. The cards do perform well so im pretty sure as these cards go to their owners they will speak highly of them.

The company I see at as a flop now is Intel we know their failed attempts at lower nm nodes etc and they are still stuck at 14nm. Nvidia knew what they were doing, much like they knew what they were doing with the GTX970 controversey.

They could still tweak their products to battle AMD. Only those who own a card feel the disappointment which surprisingly.. is probably like 1% of all GPU owners globally right now.

I would say their practises are atrocious, but flop? far from it.

I agree. I understand the frustration, even from those who weren't trying to buy a 3000 series card, but Nvidia are still in a formidable position. They technically have a node advantage over AMD, though it is certainly smaller than in past generations. And demand for the 3000 series is high despite the fact that it's generationally one of Nvidia's weakest jumps in history, at least in terms of performance per watt, and has been artificially inflated with very clever marketing strategies. Adored's analysis of the architectural leaps since Fermi makes sense to me and appears accurate. It places Ampere at the bottom of the stack. Even with that though it's still a decent series and has a lot to offer gamers who are on Pascal or prior. It also offers content creators a good rendering machine. Stock will slowly increase and should be stable by 2021. I see nothing irredeemably bad about that.
 
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