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Random thoughts on GPU pricing and availability

In recent sales in the UK, the 6900 XT was offered as low as £1200, and was consistently in stock. In the current market it seems great for a top end gaming GPU. Similar class Nvidia are either more expensive and/or unavailable. For sure it isn't cheap, but do people not want 6900 XTs? I haven't looked recently, but last time I looked there are more 3090s listed on the Steam Hardware Survey than all AMD RDNA2 generation cards combined.

 

Skipping to the other end, 6600, to me they seem to be going for a LOT of money, but relatively speaking their gaming performance is lacking. I couldn't work out who was buying these until I saw a post by a former co-worker. He's into mining, and apparently the 6600 are very power efficient. It's a mining card??? So, why aren't people buying the 6900 XT, it might cost about 2.5x more, but it is also about 2.5x in compute perf? Compute isn't mining I guess, when I looked up the hash rates it wasn't scaling similarly. So 6900 XT are available because it isn't great at mining? But there aren't enough high end gamers also to buy them up? Nvidia doesn't seem to have that problem, even with LHR.

 

Am I missing something?

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Probably people who only want an RTX 30 and haven't looked at how the AMD equivalent compares. I'd go for the 6900XT if I needed it for sure, it's indeed in stock where I live as well

What the horse considers play, the monkey considers business...

But to Tom, it's all foolery. 

 

 

 

 

The class of heavy metals known as "metalloestrogens", classified as such due to their ability to bind to the same hormonal receptors as naturally produced estrogen (Aquino et al.), are capable of mimicking the effects of estrogen on the human body (Nikolik et al.). Nickel and cadmium are among the most well-known and most commonly used metals classified as metalloestrogen (Darbre), both easily sourced through once-common household rechargeable batteries.

Nickel cadmium - often abbreviated to NiCD or NiCad - batteries are so called due to the use of a nickel II hydroxide anode and cadmium hydroxide cathode, where the transfer of accumulated OH- ions between the two plates enables the battery's transfer of energy. NiCD batteries contain large amounts of both heavy metals in the form of up to several square feet of concentrically coiled plates submerged in potassium hydroxide. Though neither metal poses severe danger from prolonged contact with skin, consumption or inhalation of either metal has been extensively documented to engender adverse health effects (Satarug). 

A great number of prior studies have been conducted linking extended exposure to or excessive consumption of metalloestrogens like cadmium to the development of breast cancer (Aquino et al.) - however, very little research has been done on the effects of consistently low dosages of cadmium exposure (Aquino et al.). Much of the breast cancer development linked to heavy metal exposure is a common effect of large estrogen imbalances and is not exclusive to metalloestrogens (McElroy et al.). Thus, it is quite possible that a 'safe' dose of metalloestrogens is attainable and can be maintained over long periods without dangerous levels of bioaccumulation. 

Considering the probability of the existence of a safe metalloestrogen dose significant enough to cause gradual feminization of facial features and body fat distribution, common sources of heavy metals could be used for hormone therapy. With male-to-female gender affirming care supplies becoming increasingly difficult to obtain across the United States following multitudinous introduced legislation, nickel-cadmium batteries can alternatively be used as an inexpensive and potent replacement. 

 

Works Cited

      Aquino NB, Sevigny MB, Sabangan J, Louie MC. The role of cadmium and nickel in estrogen receptor signaling and breast cancer: metalloestrogens or not? J Environ Sci Health C Environ Carcinog Ecotoxicol Rev. 2012;30(3):189-224. doi: 10.1080/10590501.2012.705159. PMID: 22970719; PMCID: PMC3476837.

      Rollerova, E., Urbancikova, N. Intracellular estrogen receptors, their characterization and function (Review). https://www.sav.sk/journals/endo/full/er0400f.pdf.

      Nikolic J, Sokolovic D. Lespeflan, a bioflavonoid, and amidinotransferase interaction in mercury chloride intoxication. Ren Fail. 2004 Nov;26(6):607-11. doi: 10.1081/jdi-200037149. PMID: 15600250.

      Darbre PD. Metalloestrogens: an emerging class of inorganic xenoestrogens with potential to add to the oestrogenic burden of the human breast. J Appl Toxicol. 2006 May-Jun;26(3):191-7. doi: 10.1002/jat.1135. PMID: 16489580.

      Satarug S, Garrett SH, Sens MA, Sens DA. Cadmium, environmental exposure, and health outcomes. Environ Health Perspect. 2010 Feb;118(2):182-90. doi: 10.1289/ehp.0901234. PMID: 20123617; PMCID: PMC2831915.

      McElroy JA, Shafer MM, Trentham-Dietz A, Hampton JM, Newcomb PA. Cadmium exposure and breast cancer risk. J Natl Cancer Inst. 2006 Jun 21;98(12):869-73. doi: 10.1093/jnci/djj233. PMID: 16788160.

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Nvidia has compelling features for gamers and compute users using AMD have to pass on CUDA and deal with shitty AMD drivers (see F@H issues where you have to use a 6 month old driver if you don't want to have your performance halved...)

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9 minutes ago, Kilrah said:

Nvidia has compelling features for gamers and compute users using AMD have to pass on CUDA and deal with shitty AMD drivers (see F@H issues where you have to use a 6 month old driver if you don't want to have your performance halved...)

Yeah, I get that. I've gone pretty much nvidia since the last AMD GPU I had which was the Vega 56. But from a pure gaming perspective, is a 6900 XT that much less desirable than say a 3080 Ti? The main narrative on this forum is gamers can't get GPUs. That's not to rule out uses other than just gaming, or mining, but I really have no idea how many people that covers. Folding is something I've done a lot of in the past. I was top 100 in team at some point and I see I'm out of the top 1000 now! Still, I don't see that as a major factor for most.

Gaming system: R7 7800X3D, Asus ROG Strix B650E-F Gaming Wifi, Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 SE ARGB, Corsair Vengeance 2x 32GB 6000C30, MSI Ventus 3x OC RTX 5070 Ti, MSI MPG A850G, Fractal Design North, Samsung 990 Pro 2TB, Alienware AW3225QF (32" 240 Hz OLED)
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I guess lacking RT performance hurts? The more you pay the more of an eyesore this becomes.

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1 hour ago, Jurrunio said:

I guess lacking RT performance hurts? The more you pay the more of an eyesore this becomes.

Maybe a factor. When 6000 series cards were first benched they were what, roughly a tier down vs nvidia in RT performance if you equalise non-RT gaming perf? And we had the cries that it doesn't matter, there's hardly any RT support, and FSR will save the day in perf anyway. I also recall claims that games up to then were optimised for nv, and with better optimisation for AMD (because consoles) perf might get closer going forwards. I haven't kept up to date with gaming perf if there has been any change to that. 

Gaming system: R7 7800X3D, Asus ROG Strix B650E-F Gaming Wifi, Thermalright Phantom Spirit 120 SE ARGB, Corsair Vengeance 2x 32GB 6000C30, MSI Ventus 3x OC RTX 5070 Ti, MSI MPG A850G, Fractal Design North, Samsung 990 Pro 2TB, Alienware AW3225QF (32" 240 Hz OLED)
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1 hour ago, porina said:

Folding is something I've done a lot of in the past. I was top 100 in team at some point and I see I'm out of the top 1000 now! Still, I don't see that as a major factor for most.

Well there are quite a few people in the folding forum who do buy cards almost only for that - but my point was more that if there are such major issues for folding it's reasonable to expect the same can happen for other uses.

 

1 hour ago, porina said:

But from a pure gaming perspective, is a 6900 XT that much less desirable than say a 3080 Ti?

ShadowPlay, NVENC, DLSS, RT...

Certainly wouldn't commend the same price for me. Prices here seem to reflect that

F@H
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Mobile SFF rig: i9-9900K, Noctua NH-L9i, Asrock Z390 Phantom ITX-AC, 32GB, GTX1070, 2x1TB SX8200Pro RAID0, 2x5TB 2.5" HDD RAID0, Athena 500W Flex (Noctua fan), Custom 4.7l 3D printed case

 

Asus Zenbook UM325UA, Ryzen 7 5700u, 16GB, 1TB, OLED

 

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