• fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      9 days ago

      Nvidia doesn’t care. Their margins will be high enough, and there will be enough buyers that they’ll be able to print money at whatever absurd price point they choose.

    • Psythik@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      I got lucky and scored a 4090 at a discount on launch day. I think I’ll just hang onto it for a few more generations. It still has plenty of power to run everything at 4K 120Hz especially with DLSS Balanced, (except Indiana Jones; that game is extremely demanding), which I use anyway cause IMO it looks better than AA.

    • Vash63@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      32GB is news. It confirms either a 512 or (more likely) 256 bit bus, which would be a significant drop from the 384 bit on the 4090.

      I’m sure the increased perf of G7 would fully offset that, but this means without some larger caches it will be difficult for this to be a massive performance jump from last gen.

      Unless they’re going 512 bit, in which case ignore all that and wow is this a monster.

  • Ragdoll X@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    Knowing Nvidia’s exorbitant pricing, I think I’ll keep Intel’s Arc B580 in my wishlist.

  • The Hobbyist@lemmy.zip
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    10 days ago

    Allegedly, the 5090 would have 32GB and the 5080 16GB, I don’t see much room for the 5060 to have more than 8GB if the 5070 itself has 12GB?

    I would have loved to see the 5080 with 24GB, the 5070 with 16GB and the 5060 with 12GB (at least). And for the 5060 to drop the 128 bit bus…

    • KoalaUnknown@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      I would have loved to see the 5080 with 24GB

      They wouldn’t do this because it would undercut their 5090 sales.

      • CosmoNova@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        Sales and probably pricing itself. With a gap this large, the price of the 5090 might be more than twice as high as that of the 5080 and people would still buy it.

        • fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          9 days ago

          If the value proposition continues, and based on the leak it seems like it will, the 5090 would be a better value FPS per dollar than the 5080 and anything below it. The 4090 cost like 40% more than the 4080, but gave 60% better performance. The 5090 looks like it will be well over twice the performance of the 5080, so I’d expect twice the price.

    • Raxiel@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      A 5060 with 8gb will have Intel wringing their hands with glee. Whatever performance gains the ($300-350) 5060 GPU has (and I don’t doubt they’ll be notable) will be choked off by an 8gb framebuffer. They might do a 16gb clamshell like they did with the 4060ti but like you said, where does that leave the 12gb 70 card?

  • AhismaMiasma@lemm.ee
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    10 days ago

    This is why I love Zotac. We’ll, not this reason, but it adds to the small pile of smiles they’ve given me.

    That being said I’m skipping this Nvidia gen and might break for AMD next. My 3090 is still trucking fine and I feel like Nvidia has lost their value after the debacles of the 40 series.

    • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      You should think about selling it TBH. 3090 prices are shooting up like crazy, and may be at a peak, because they are the last affordable card to self host LLMs.

        • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          Yeah, but they not worth it.

          The 4090 is basically just as good as the 3090 because it has the same amount of vram, but twice the price… so you mind as well get 2x 3090s.

          The 5090 will be hilariously expensive, and 24GB -> 32GB is not that great, as you still can’t run 70B class models in that pool… again, mind as well get 2x 3090s. I would not even bother trading my single 3090 for 5090.

          If AMD sold a 48GB consumer card, you would see them dominate the open source LLM space in a month, because every single backend dev would buy one and get their projects working on them. Same with Intel. VRAM is basically the only thing that matters, and 24GB is kinda pitiful at a 4090’s price.

          • DarkThoughts@fedia.io
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            9 days ago

            I’d already be happy if AMD goes with 24 GB on their upper midrange cards, but I would not be surprised if they stick with 16 GB. 48 GB seems extremely unlikely, unfortunately.

            Doing LLMs with 8 GB is not fun, especially not with RDNA 2 which has so many issues with ROCm.

          • CheeseNoodle@lemmy.world
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            8 days ago

            Halo has me hopeful that AMD are going to continue down this idea of having APUs that can use onboard RAM instead of requiring it to be built in. It’d be great to just be able to upgrade my RAM rather than replace a whole ass GPU.

            • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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              8 days ago

              It uses embedded LPDDR5X, so it will not be upgradeable unless the mobo/laptop maker uses LPCAMMs.

              And… that’s kinda how it has to be. Laptop SO-DIMMs are super slow due to the design of the DIMMs, and they need crazy voltages to even hit the speeds/timings they run at now.

      • AhismaMiasma@lemm.ee
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        9 days ago

        Never even thought of that, is there a good website to sell a GPU on or is it pretty much just eBay?

        I just don’t play games like I used to, just videos now. Poor thing hardly gets any use.

        • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          You could list it locally depending on where you are, through FB marketplace or Craigslist.

          Otherwise, yeah, eBay.

    • mightyfoolish@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      Did you hear about the news that AMD is skipping out on “high-end” market segment next generation? No real concrete numbers to this statement. I have heard speculation that they plan on making cards just as powerful as last gen except with better ray tracing and CHEAPER.

      • AhismaMiasma@lemm.ee
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        8 days ago

        I have heard this, and to be honest, I don’t think I need the highest power GPU anymore. I mostly got the 3090 for VR and I seldom use my kit anymore. Upper-mid range AMD might be the answer for me.

    • circuitfarmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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      9 days ago

      AMD is by far the price-per-unit-performance leader. Same is true on the CPU side. Intel and Nvidia aren’t even on the chart tbh.

  • BaroqueInMind@lemmy.one
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    10 days ago

    I just want one to self host a 70B LLM model for fuck’s sake. I don’t want to be forced to take out a god damned mortgage/personal loan to buy one.

    • teuto@lemmy.teuto.icu
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      9 days ago

      I picked up a pair of old Tesla P40s. Right now I’m running a Q4 quant of Qwen 2.5 72B that fits in the combined 48GB of VRAM with 12k context. They aren’t as fast as newer consumer cards, but it generates as fast as I can read while costing less than a used 3080.

        • teuto@lemmy.teuto.icu
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          8 days ago

          I have a dell power edge 730, which was about $200. It’s CPU shrouds perfectly match the GPU intakes so air just flows through both from the server fans. I’ve seen a few 3d printable fan mounts for jury rigging them into a regular tower too.

    • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Qwen 2.5 32B is where it’s at now. 24GB is affordable, and it fits perfectly.

      Otherwise, stay on the lookout for AMD Strix Halo, which can reportedly allocate up to 96GB on its IGP, and you can run faster backends like vllm or exllama.

        • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          It’s just smarter with the same number of parameters. Try Qwen QwQ or Qwen coder 32B, see for yourself… it stacks up well against huge models like the 123B Mistral Large, or even GPT-4.

          Why? Alibaba trained it well, presumably with better data than OpenAI or whomever else, though specifics are up for debate. Some suggests that bilingual training on English/Chinese (aka the two largest text corpuses in existance) significantly helps the model over mostly english. Some say the government just gave them better data. There’s also suggestions that having so few GPUs compared to American AI companies made the Chinese “thrifty,” and gave them far more incentive to be innovative rather than brute forcing models (which has diminishing returns).