NVIDIA announces RTX Spark
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The Radeon RX 9070 was AMD’s GPU geared toward 1440p gaming, with the promise that in some less-demanding games it could push all the way to 4K. That card had 16GB of VRAM, meaning it was better for handling higher resolutions on demand. The 12GB GRE version is, simply put, less capable.
The AMD RX 9070 GRE is out for the global market, and we will be pitching it against the data we already have for the RX 9070, 9070 XT, and 7800 XT; but also the NVIDIA RTX 5090 FE, 5070 FE, and 4070
For most of the AI boom, Nvidia (NVDA) has been the only name that mattered in data center hardware. That dynamic is shifting. AMD (AMD) stock has risen 55% year-to-date
When the AMD Radeon RX 7900 GRE came out back in 2024, it offered some of the best bang-for-your-buck performance to be found in a graphics card, especially at 1440p. The new Radeon RX 9070 GRE is trying to follow in those footsteps, even launching at the same $549 price tag. But the PC gaming landscape has changed a lot in the last few years.
Nvidia is jumping into the PC chip space, sending AMD and Intel stock tumbling. The RTX Spark was revealed at the Computex event in Taipei.
With GPU and memory prices making building a PC a losing proposition, Chinese brands just have to prove they can take over from companies that have all but abandoned consumer PCs. Chinese technology company Lisuan Tech’s first GPU,
Shares of Nvidia NVDA were surging on Monday morning in contrast to the broader market. The stock was soaring around 4% as the broader indices were under pressure in early trading.
The declines came after Nvidia unveiled the first personal laptop computers designed for running artificial-intelligence agents, which use a newly designed version of the company'