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The 16GB model is pretty decent if you can find it for under $400. The MSRP is $349 for basic models, but they sold out pretty quickly in the US. You should still be able to find slightly faster models for around $389.
(In Australia the MSRP models are still available.)
The 8GB model is $50 cheaper and is readily available at MSRP because it sucks and you shouldn't buy it.
It's consistently faster than Nvidia's RTX 5060 and the same price. Compared to the 5060 Ti it's cheaper, and faster on non-ray-traced games, though a little slower in ray-traced titles. (And a lot slower on Black Myth Wukong which significantly favours Nvidia hardware, but that's an outlier.)
If you want a graphics card that is merely a bit expensive but not actually insanely overpriced, this is the one to buy.
(Or go back in time a few months and nab a 7800 XT for $400 like I did.)
That is, a factory that takes individual silicon dies and puts them together to build a more complicated "chip". AMD's server CPUs for example can contain up to 17 individual "chiplets".
SpaceX plans to go a bit further, packaging devices up to, uh, two feet square.
(Instead of three inches, which is what most companies settle for.)
Anthropic is upset that the AI industry is not being targeted with an impenetrable swamp of state-level regulations that only a multi-billion-dollar can afford to navigate, because it is a multi-billion-dollar company and can afford to navigate it.
How can we have regulatory capture without regulations?
9060 XT Review Videos of the Day
The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. The Ugly is Nvidia.