Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

Look out, Nvidia, AMD Radeon 300 Series GPUs Are (Almost) Ready to Rumble

Add as a preferred source on Google

GPU market leader Nvidia recently gave perennial underdog AMD an unexpected hand towards financial recovery, botching the specifications of the upper mid-range GTX 970 video card. The Red Team is now pulling all the stops to capitalize on its rival’s misfortunes, aggressively promoting the Radeon R9 290 as a “true” 4GB RAM alternative, and teasing the next-gen graphics launch.

Ah, yes, the Radeon R9 380X and 390X are no longer rumors backed by questionable evidence, they’re officially confirmed products in pre-release stages. In the words of AMD’s Facebook handler, “we’re still putting the finishing touches on the 300 series to make sure they live up to expectation.”

Recommended Videos

Thrilling stuff, but alas, there are no dates to share “just yet.” The Sunnyvale-based semiconductor giant also trumpets its “excitement” vis-à-vis the 300 family, though that doesn’t really tell us much. What are they to say, that the graphics cards are humdrum, but fingers crossed?

Anyway, it’s good to get formal corroboration of the GPU lineup’s existence, and there’s been (faint) hints of an early Q2 rollout instead of a distant summer deadline. Rumor is the Radeon R9 380X and 390X will pioneer something called high bandwidth memory (HBM) technology for vastly improved RAM performance.

Most likely built on 20nm architecture, the powerhouse duo could leave Nvidia’s industry-dominating GeForce GTX 980 in the dust not only in raw speed, but energy efficiency too. Of course, the “green team” is probably working hard on a 20nm die shrink and upgrade as well, albeit we’re a lot lighter on purported technical details and timelines for the GTX 990, with a 1000 series possibly delayed until 2016.

Of course, this is all in the future. Right now Nvidia, GTX 970 woes aside, is riding high on favorable reviews for the GTX 900 series. This back-and-forth is standard in the GPU industry, as both AMD and Nvidia constantly attempt to upstage each other.

Adrian Diaconescu
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Adrian is a mobile aficionado since the days of the Nokia 3310, and a PC enthusiast since Windows 98. Later, he discovered…
This one app has single-handedly improved my Mac experience
It won't reinvent macOS. It will just quietly fix everything that annoys you about it.
Supercharge app

Every once in a while, you come across an app that fundamentally changes how you use your Mac. Over the past year, Supercharge has been that app for me. It packs hundreds of tweaks and features that solve macOS’s several annoyances and add improvements that upgrade the experience. 

While it will be hard to cover all its features in a single article, here are my favorite Supercharge features that have single-handedly improved my Mac experience. They've become such an integral part of my workflow that I now miss them whenever I use a Mac without Supercharge.

Read more
What is Copilot? Everything you need to know about Microsoft’s AI assistant
There’s a Copilot for almost everything now. Here’s which one you need
Microsoft Copilot Banner Featured

Microsoft has attached the Copilot name to so many products that a simple question like "What is Copilot?" now needs a little more context. There is the main Microsoft Copilot chatbot, Copilot inside Microsoft 365, GitHub Copilot for developers, Gaming Copilot for Xbox users, and a separate category of Windows laptops called Copilot+ PCs.

For most people, Microsoft Copilot means the company’s general-purpose AI assistant. So you'd expect it to answer questions, search the web, generate and edit images, and the rest of the usual AI chatbot features. You can access it through a browser or dedicated apps for Windows, macOS, Android, and iOS. It is also integrated into Microsoft Edge, the Xbox mobile app, and Game Bar on Windows 11.

Read more
I tried to parody the most absurd AI products, but the tech industry beat me to it
The joke was supposed to be that every household object gets cameras, AI insights, and a premium tier. Apparently, that’s now a business plan
Imaginary AI products

I wanted to invent an AI product so silly that no founder could turn it into a seed round.

It had to solve a problem nobody had, collect far more data than the problem deserved, and turn normal behavior into an insight that sounded vaguely disappointed in its owner. Somewhere around the third feature, it would ask for a subscription.

Read more