Even if you never buy an Arc card, a competitive Intel will benefit all gamers.
Only if someone else does for you.
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Even if you never buy an Arc card, a competitive Intel will benefit all gamers.
Only if someone else does for you.
I mean so long as it's a decent enough card, people will buy it. The arc cards we already got have some pretty solid price/performance, at least after the drivers got improved.
No open sources drivers, no buy
How do you not know that Intel has they same type of open source graphics driver like AMD? Their kernel module, OpenGL and Vulkan libraries are all free software, only requiring small firmware blobs. That's why Intel 'just werks' on Linux without having to download a 500mb kernel module or have a separate .iso available to download specific to the hardware.
At an absolute minimum! When Arc first came out I considered getting one just for the AV1 encoder, but there's very little else going for the whole line. An open-source driver at least makes the techier among us more likely to want to play with one.
There was some mesa bug that was over 2 years old that was just merged in recently that fixed a huge Arc bottleneck. It's embarrassing how bad the implementations are for both Windows and Linux.
That article is full of speculation; “if this” and “if that” and “if this other thing” than it will be great for everyone!
“If” is doing a hell of a lot of heavy lifting..
I'd like to say they can only get better than the current generation, but it is Intel we're talking about.
I am curous about the VRAM and price points and whether they will be useful for LLMs
Hoping they can outperform the dying 2080 Ti I have. I could use a cheap GPU upgrade.
... in the future!!!!