| JEMC said: No site is reliable all the time, even more so if the talk about future products. With that said, the article you've posted as an example is clearly labeled as a rumor, not a leak or an announcement, and both the DP 2.1 and the TSMC 3nm details came straight from Kopite, who shared them in two tweets featured in the article. The 384-bit bus memory was the rumor back then, likely also coming from a previous post by Kopite (videocardz link here), who later came up with the 512-bit bus update. At this point, you may as well say that Kopite is an unreliable source of info which, as a leaker, it's something anyone with common sense should take for granted. There are leakers that get more things right than wrong, and he's one of them, but no one has a 100% correct track record. As for using AI to write articles and create pics, I didn't know that and it's a shame. If you have better sources for those kinds of leaks, it would be great if you could share them with the rest of us. |
That's precisely the issue I have.
Sites posting entire articles based on rumors and making full blown articles out of it where people run with it and try to propagate it as fact is building false-hype.
"Fake news" if you will.
Videocarz.com also uses A.I to write some articles and uses A.I. to generate images for said article, not that A.I is intrinsically wrong, it's just removing the human emotion from building articles with unique takes on issues.
| haxxiy said: As a result, AMD is up almost 30% today. I knew I should have bought some stock... As for Nvidia, I wonder what they're thinking and how long this will keep up. Rubin is already 2300W, which means all the savings from the N3 node vs. Blackwell that could have been went for higher performance and VRAM instead. Rubin Ultra is just two Rubins glued together. Now, I don't expect that to be 4600W, but the trend is clear. |
A.I. alone is currently using 1.5% of the worlds energy at 415 terawatt hours, which is a stupidly catastrophic amount... And set to increase to 3% of the worlds energy usage by 2030.
To put that into context, that is equivalent to roughly 10% of the USA's total electricity generation.
The race to dump more watts into bigger chips needs to change to smarter solutions.

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