Nvidia becomes the most valuable public company - GSMArena.com news (m.gsmarena.com)
from sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al to technology@beehaw.org on 19 Jun 09:19
https://lazysoci.al/post/14806037

#technology

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Hirom@beehaw.org on 19 Jun 09:54 next collapse

They were years ahead of the curve with AI hardware, and they’re well placed to benefit from the AI craze.

Regardless of whether a company’s AI product is useful, or profitable, they need lot of hardware to make it run.

DdCno1@beehaw.org on 19 Jun 14:40 collapse

To illustrate your point, my old GPU, a GTX 1080 from 2016 (basically ancient history - Obama was still president back then) remains a very useful for ML-applications today - and this isn’t even their oldest card that is still relevant for AI. This card was never meant for this, but thanks to Nvidia investing into CUDA and CUDA being useful for all sorts of non-gaming applications, the API became a natural first choice when ML tools that run on consumer hardware started to get developed.

My current GPU, an RTX 2080, is just two years younger and yet it’s so powerful (for everything I throw at it, including ML) that I won’t have to upgrade it for years to come.

fuckwit_mcbumcrumble@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 20 Jun 03:31 collapse

Whatever makes RTX work is what accelerations a lot of AI tasks. I’d argue the 1080 is bordering on irrelevant if it wasn’t for the 8 gigs of ram to save it. The 2060 should be much faster despite for gaming being about in par.

itslilith@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 19 Jun 10:45 next collapse

At the moment it feels like the proverb about gold rushs and shovels

ssm@lemmy.sdf.org on 20 Jun 05:43 collapse

Except the gold is actually poop and the shovels require burning several trees per dig

ryan213@lemmy.ca on 19 Jun 11:09 next collapse

And still no updated Shield TV. 😭

veroxii@aussie.zone on 19 Jun 13:30 next collapse

What’s missing in the shield? I have a gen 1 and it still plays anything I throw at it. High bitrate HDR 4k video etc.

Scrath@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Jun 14:39 next collapse

I believe its missing h265 and av1 hardware support and while it probably has enough performance to handle those codecs in software, I wasn’t willing to drop more than 100 euros on a 5 year old device without hardware decoding for them

veroxii@aussie.zone on 19 Jun 17:25 next collapse

That’s untrue. I specifically bought it for h265 decoding. Which it does have in hardware. I play h265 content exclusively and never had an issue. Even 80~100mbps blue ray UHD rips. And because it has gigabit ethernet there’s never any buffering issues either from my NAS.

Scrath@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Jun 21:04 collapse

Ah, I guess I was only looking at AV1 support in that case. I only remembered it was missing something I wanted due to its age

storcholus@feddit.de on 19 Jun 20:00 collapse

I got most of my Plex library on h265 and there is no problem with my shield,

ryan213@lemmy.ca on 19 Jun 20:47 collapse

Nothing is missing - but mine’s 5 years old and I want to make sure it can be replaced before it finally dies.

DdCno1@beehaw.org on 20 Jun 16:20 collapse

Even first gen ones from 2015 are still being used. I don’t think these die all that often. They will be obsolete at some point, but even this takes far longer than with other tech. As long as you make sure it doesn’t overheat, it should last for a while longer.

ryan213@lemmy.ca on 20 Jun 18:12 collapse

Yeah, I was surprised there were still lots of people using the 2015 version. It’s a good sign so hopefully mine will be good for a long while still.

DdCno1@beehaw.org on 19 Jun 14:31 collapse

I mean, one of the core ideas behind these things is that these are highly capable devices that are receiving updates for several times as long as normal tech, so you can just keep using them for ages.

Apart from the very latest codecs, what else should they do that they aren’t already doing?

algorithmae@lemmy.sdf.org on 19 Jun 13:33 next collapse

I wish it were as easy to make money on stock prices going down as it is to make money on stock prices going up

technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Jun 17:07 next collapse

Pretty sure the entire system is based around making the line go up regardless of everything else.

algorithmae@lemmy.sdf.org on 19 Jun 17:59 collapse

I can’t reliably predict when line go up, but I have a pretty good idea of when line go down. Let me make money on that lol

pineapple_pizza@lemmy.dexlit.xyz on 19 Jun 17:15 collapse

You could buy options

algorithmae@lemmy.sdf.org on 19 Jun 17:58 collapse

I’m not employed by Nvidia though? Unless I’m misunderstanding

pineapple_pizza@lemmy.dexlit.xyz on 19 Jun 19:30 collapse

Anyone can trade options. See www.investopedia.com/terms/p/putoption.asp

This is very risky though, I wouldn’t recommend doing this without some training and research.

I’m Not a financial advisor

algorithmae@lemmy.sdf.org on 19 Jun 20:01 collapse

That goes back to my original point, “I wish it were as easy…”

fubarx@lemmy.ml on 19 Jun 15:20 collapse

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