The great chip shortage combined with crypto mining demands has been a heavy hit for graphics cards over the past few years. Getting a decent one over the past few years has been basically impossible, and those that have managed it have often paid through the nose. Given that shortage is all but set to ease it would seem like roaring into the next gen full steam ahead is a good move, but Nvidia is thinking of keeping some of those older cards around.
During an investors event (spotted by PC Mag) Nvidia CFO Collette Kress was asked about next generation products, specifically upcoming GPUs. Kress didn't say a lot about what we can expect on the new side, but did mention that the 3000 series of GPUs may stick around to be sold alongside the next generation.
“Even during this period of COVID and supply constraints, it’s been interesting because it’s given us the opportunity for gaming to continue to sell both the current generation (RTX 3000) as well as the Turing generation (the RTX 2000 series),” Said Kress. “So we’ve been doing that to provide more and more supply to our gamers in that. And we may see something like that continue in the future.”
Last year Nvidia announced a rehash on some of its 2000 series cards with upgraded RAM. It was a bit of an odd move then, but was clearly aimed at helping with the rush demand for gaming GPUs. We were hoping for some nice cheap 2000 series upgrades, but instead we were greeted with options a bit more expensive than what we'd hoped.
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