ArInA-pAn Posted February 27, 2021 Posted February 27, 2021 We cannot deny that the announcement of the new graphics cards for mining by NVIDIA has caused quite a stir. The CMP HX GPUs would arrive to solve the problem of the stock of graphics cards for gaming, but the cross of the coin arrives with the RTX 3060 and will be extended shortly to the rest of the models, since NVIDIA limits the performance of its gaming GPUs for mining . Do we or are we not really owners of our hardware if this happens? We may not have thought about it, we may not be aware of it, but indirectly NVIDIA has set a precedent in the industry that can be very dangerous for the user. This article is rather opinionated, thoughtful and with a clear objective: to ask ourselves for a moment if what has just happened with the new RTX 3060 (and those to come) is really a restriction on the freedom of the consumer who acquires an NVIDIA GPU . Are we about to lose ownership of our hardware by purchasing an NVIDIA GPU? so the performance will drop 50% in this area when the driver detects the software algorithm to mine the Ethereum cryptocurrency. This is something totally new in the industry and the company masks it with the slogan of "GeForce is made for gaming" and although they are right, it is the company that is dictating what we can do with our GPU and what not. Let's not limit this to mining, because this is not an argument or attack against the company or against wanting to launch a new line of GPUs exclusively for mining. The problem is that you are limiting the buyer's freedom to a specific segment to use their proprietary hardware. Now let's think about video editing software, what would happen if NVIDIA limits its use to us, such as the performance in SONY Vegas? In exchange for this performance restriction, it offers us GPUs that do a worse job, slower, but cheaper and more efficient, but also limited and with an exclusive use for this purpose, which is why it encourages us to buy those new models. But, by pure logic, it is indirectly limiting the use of our proprietary hardware, it would take away a range of possibilities simply because it does not fit with their sales strategy and they have a stock problem that they cannot solve themselves (current case of the RTX 3000).
Recommended Posts