"Of course, AMD is trying to get into the the AI training and inferencing game itself with the Instinct MI300 chip. And that, perhaps, is the main if modest cause for hope. If AMD can gain some traction in that huge market, it will not only be making lots of money, it will be in a position to do a similar thing to Nvidia and push some of that technology across into its gaming GPUs."
which strikes me as incorrect. AMD MI is pretty widespread in HPC. With margins lower in the consumer market it makes sense to focus on HPC.
Hopefully we start to see further cuts - AMD really needs to position itself as a value competitor to Nvidia. There's no reason the 7900 XTX or XT launched at the price they did, let alone the rest of the 7000 series.
Perhaps my evaluation is wrong here, but AMD seems to be doing the right thing with iGPU. Granted, they're not customizable, but perhaps, there could be a new market for a generation that seems to not want to deal with the burden of modular parts? Maybe laptops and tiny-factor PC cases?
I don’t know how far down the line that upgrade might be, but I’ve recently used both a 1080 and the latest-gen (see reply below) an AMD igpu (7600x) and I gotta say the 1080 is still significantly more powerful. Maybe if the upgrade is soon hold off on selling the 1080 until you see if you’re satisfied with the igpu performance?
Maybe if they weren't playing stupid games with the open source Linux graphics driver it would help. I know I won't be upgrading to a newer AMD card until that mess is properly sorted.
I switched from nvidia when the 6000 series of AMD GPU came out, and it made all my graphics issues go away, no joke. Nvidia's drivers are in a much worse spot these days.