Nvidia Intends to Drop Price of GeForce GTX 200-Series Graphics Cards :
  TheThirdMedia HardwareVideo GuideVideo News > Nvidia Intends to Drop Price of GeForce GTX 200-Series Graphics Cards

Nvidia Intends to Drop Price of GeForce GTX 200-Series Graphics Cards

Date: 2008-7-5

[Abstract]
   Nvidia Corp., the world’s No. 1 supplier of discrete graphics processing units, plans to further reduce pricing of its high-end graphics cards to sustain its market share, market rumours...

[Content] PCDigitalMobileGame

Nvidia Corp., the world’s No. 1 supplier of discrete graphics processing units, plans to further reduce pricing of its high-end graphics cards to sustain its market share, market rumours claim. But there are some problems: customers who have already paid for their expensive graphics boards would hardly be happy with price-cut, moreover, manufacturing costs may be too high and Nvidia may not afford a price reduction.

Citing sources among Nvidia add-in-card partners, HotHardware web-site reported that Nvidia plans to lower the price of its flagship GeForce GTX 280 graphics card to $499 from $649 shortly from now. Presently the company’s partners sell less expensive GeForce GTX 260 for $399, however, it is unclear whether the developer plans to reduce the pricing of this model too.

may be a little higher, or potentially even a little lower (than $499), but that [is] something definitely in the works,” an anonymous supplier of graphics cards said in a brief interview with HotHardware web-site.

The GeForce GTX 260 and GTX 280 graphics cards are based on Nvidia G200 graphics processing unit, which is very large in size and is believed to be very expensive to manufacture. Actual graphics cards utilize very advanced power supply chain as well as 512-bit memory bus, thus, they are pretty expensive to make as well. While the exact price of the chip is unknown, it is believed to be over $100, which is a very high price for a chip. Since the manufacturing costs are very high for Nvidia, it is unclear whether the company will make substantial profit selling its high-end products.

Nvidia needs to decrease pricing of its high-end graphics cards as its arch-rival ATI, graphics product group of Advanced Micro Devices, is finally back with high-performance ATI Radeon HD 4850 and 4870 graphics cards that are priced at $199 and $299, respectively. According to performance benchmarks, two ATI Radeon HD 4850 graphics boards quite frequently outperform the GeForce GTX 280 while costing less, which is why many enthusiasts may prefer two higher-end ATI Radeon HD 4870 models over the offering from Nvidia, even despite of the fact that multi-GPU operation heavily relies on drivers.

Earlier this week Nvidia issued a warning regarding its earnings during the second quarter of fiscal 2009.

Nvidia did not comment on the news-story.

Related news

  • Head of Graphics Cards Supplier Expects Intel's Larrabee to Change the Market.
    BFG Technology President Expects Intel's Discrete Graphics Chip to Change the Market, Still Bets on Nvidia
  • Nvidia Projects Long Lifespan for Current Generation Flagship Graphics Chip.
    Nvidia: Current Flagship ?G92?Graphics Processor to Live for Another 6-12 Month
  • Nvidia Admits Issues with Product Naming Scheme.
    Nvidia Confesses in Complicated Product Naming Way
  • Nvidia Makes Available Hybrid SLI Graphics Technology.
    Nvidia Unveils Hybrid SLI Technology for the Third Time
  • Nvidia Quietly Unveils New Performance Mainstream Graphics Cards.
    Nvidia Unwraps Rebranded GeForce 8800 GS - GeForce 9600 GSO
  • Commercial Introduction of GDDR5 to Spur Another Round of Graphics War.
    Launches of ATI and Nvidia Next-Generation Graphics Processors May Be Aligned with GDDR5 Roll-Out
  • EVGA Pre-Overclocks Nvidia's Latest Dual-Chip Graphics Cards.
    EVGA Becomes Industry's First Company to Pre-Overclock GeForce 9800 GX2


[ Remark ] [ Print ] [ Font: Large Standard Small ]

Last News: 16:9 Panels to Replace 16:10 Panels, Says Research Firm
Next News: Intel: Nvidia's CUDA, AMD's CTM are ?Interesting Footnote?of History

Search News



 
Class Title
Home Page (0)
CPU Guide (959)
Chipset Guide (193)
Memory Guide (472)
Mainboard Guide (464)
Video Guide (1339)
Video Article (635)
Video News (704)
Storage Guide (410)
Multimedia Guide (736)
Mobile Guide (492)
Other HD Guide (2471)
 
Hot News
     
     
      >> Remark List   [Total 0 Remarks]
     
    Post Remark


    Remark: Letters0
    Name:   


      >> Related News