And still you're probably off to sell it for some $400-500 more than what you paid for originally.
So please tell me how wronged you were here.
Time is money.. I've wasted far more time on this than the pennies that are gained because AMD, out of nowhere, cut production of the card. I'm not a person whose aim was to buy a single GPU to play with. I invested a considerable amount of time following up on and tracking an eval card that I intended to purchase a considerable quantity for related to a medium/large scale development effort.
$200 is peanuts and that's about the extent of what you're going to get on markup.. You wont be making $400/$500 more off of a vega that hardly anyone got for MSRP. I understand you're attempting to belittle the magnitude of my complaint by centering on a trivial discussion about peanuts made by a miraculous markup sale because the cards literally can't be purchased anywhere. This disaster could have easily gone the opposite way and I'd be in the red + waste time.
Excuse me? Please do show an official statement from AMD saying "Please buy this $400 ERP gaming card so you can use it for deep learning, inference and other professional activities. And BTW forget everything about Mi25 that costs 10x more. Just go with this cheap gaming version instead #wink wink#"
Maybe someone's trying to offer a wider audience of people something incredible and it required testing their stack on consumer level hardware that AMD made official statements about and marketed to high hell considering compute performance. You're making and taking quite the stance here with your obviously targeted comments... Sadly, you're bold assumptions are horribly incorrect. I'm guessing principals and decency are only afforded to 10x more cost customers? Dually noted.
Dude I
literally did it myself in my response to your post.
It's right there.
And it took me less than 5 minutes. What did you search on google for an entire hour?!
I'm not going to indulge your foolishness any further. There's a reason why there are 1000s of pages of rambling on their official dev forum, github, and many other prominent sites as to the state of Vega. "It's right here" and the card was sold "right there".
I didn't nor I intend to, but others have. Perhaps this isn't AMD's fault.
A horrible lack of communication about a product is always the company's fault.
I'm not sure what industry you work in but in the computing industry, development is already costly.
Time is money and patience wears thin with broken promises and an absolute lack of clear detailed communication.
One pissed off individual who overseas purchasing decisions due to a company's lack of detailed communication can spell the termination of you being considered for years to come. I like to evaluate how a company treats its 1/10th cost customers sometimes beyond the pro-market especially when I will potentially rely on that 1/10th cost to run my solution. I make the decisions for purchasing and I've just cut their whole product line from consideration and wont be re-evaluating this or developing for it for some time to come. Meanwhile, you can form your own opinion as to whose fault it is.
That's your opinion, yes. I don't think you do, so we'll just agree to disagree.
I created a post and stated mine. You stated yours. My decision has been made. Thanks for sharing your extended views.
You mean AMD has people providing support for enabling an expensive feature for a cheap gaming card, for which they have a much more expensive card (MI25) to cater to that market. They actually have someone helping you make them less money. And you think that's bad.
What else are you outraged about?
You have an opinion of the nature of my commentary. It's wrong. Thanks for sharing it.
Apologies for giving consideration to lowly consumers who have 1/10th my budget.
It's never going to be fixed 2x performance. It's Rapid Packed Math within the same 32bit ALU, they don't have another set of FP16 ALUs (like e.g. PowerVR solutions AFAIK).
2xFP16 is only max theoretical throughput as it needs to be the exact same operation.
And yet there's no prominent real world performance detailed from them yet I can find it from their competitors.
Imagine for a second you're the company that makes these cards...someone was about to buy 10,000 cards from you but bought an eval card first. You don't know who they are. You don't know their budget. You don't know if they are one of your top pro-line card purchasers and you talk to them in the manner you did by trying to deflect away from your company's short comings and call them a cheapskate..
Have a good one.