2024-09-26, 03:47 PM
(This post was last modified: 2024-09-26, 03:47 PM by Host-in-the-Shell. Edited 1 time in total.)
And as usual, the real losers are the consumers, as always. I've no idea why Intel decided to give up and not even try, at least in the consumer/gamer market. Maybe in the first world this doesn't really matter or something, but over here I wouldn't even touch intel for my main desktop thanks to the absurd power consumption of their cpus, not to mention their prices on top.
That said, it's a real shame if they exit the GPU market, considering the subpar offerings of the other options when it comes to encoding in terms of quality and price to performance. There's simply not much that can compare at the moment. Oh well, at least we got another line coming up; being frank here, I think even that was nothing short of a miracle all t hings considered.
That said, it's a real shame if they exit the GPU market, considering the subpar offerings of the other options when it comes to encoding in terms of quality and price to performance. There's simply not much that can compare at the moment. Oh well, at least we got another line coming up; being frank here, I think even that was nothing short of a miracle all t hings considered.
Server specs => OS: Debian 12 | GPU: Arc A380 | CPU: Ryzen 5 5600X | 64GB RAM | 56TB