I was really hoping to see more competition in the dGPU space. But considering Intel's overall troubles and the challenges with gaming dGPUs (even AMD can't come anywhere close to Nvidia in the gaming dGPU space) this is to be expected.
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Yeah, unfortunately Nvidia killed it with the CUDA. They spent really a lot of time on this software but made it very ubiquitous unlike AMD which made ROCm one big of a mess.
I don't like NVIDIA but my next GPU will be from them just because of that CUDA support.
Yeah, unfortunately Nvidia killed it with the CUDA.
This shit is why anti-trust law is important. CUDA should've been forcibly opened so that competitors were allowed to implement it.
Same here, it's the only reason I buy NVIDIA. I'd still like to see more Intel GPUs, they are great for budget builds in a time where prices have skyrocketed. I was thinking about getting one as a secondary GPU.
I wonder how many of ARC's issues were a result of Windows, since I've been using an ARC a750 for about a year now on Linux and it has been really solid, better than the 2060 I had before. The only compute I use the card for is in Blender and it works really well for that.
I believe many of major the drivers issues were sorted out after releases. Although I doubt support is anywhere close to being as good as AMD, let alone Nvidia.
I tried to run Windows with ARC earlier this year and the driver updater would shit istelf and refuse to update the drivers, requiring a full reinstall. Some of the software I wanted to use just straight up did not work (Steam link, ALVR, Minecraft with the Vivecraft mod) and Half Life: ALyx had some annoying graphical issues. It was pretty performant though so ARC is still a good option when every penny counts.
To add on, Windows needs support for all the directX versions on top of vulkan and OpenGl, when Linux only needs vulkan and OpenGl working.
Welp. Not sure how you can call this committed. Intel already did integrated graphics before Arc so this would just be an evolution of them, while it sounds like they're likely going to abandon the discrete / desktop GPU market.
Intel ARC GPUs are actually very good. They just tried being a little too based by saying fuck you to HDMI and DirectX, both market leaders. They only support DP (HDMI is actually converted to DP in ARC GPUs), and only cared to properly implement Vulkan drivers.