25% of graphics cards went to crypto miners in the first quarter of 2021

[ad_1]
Source: Harish Jonnalagadda / Windows Central
Though people have been asking about the impact of crypto miners on the availability of the best graphics cards for months now, companies such as AMD have been tight-lipped. Others, such as NVIDIA, have gotten to work on stifling crypto miners’ ambitions, though still haven’t said much to the public in terms of what the concrete impact of crypto miners has been on GPU supplies.
Now, Jon Peddie Research has bucked the industry trend of ambiguous answers by giving some hard estimates on the not-so-minor impact miners have had (via Tom’s Hardware).
Jon Peddie Research has produced a model which posits the idea that “[…] about 25% of the AIBs shipped in Q1’21 went to miners and speculators. That’s approximately 700,000 high-end and midrange AIBS in Q1’21. And the market value is about $500 million—a half a billion dollars.”
So, there you have it. Close to a million GPUs have disappeared into the ether of mining and speculation if the aforementioned firm’s numbers are correct or close thereto. Perhaps they’re not accurate, and NVIDIA’s efforts to inconvenience crypto miners are just an elaborate ruse to prop up a hoax that helps masquerade natural, organic shortages. Maybe the whole thing is a big boogeyman scenario.
… Or, maybe crypto miners grabbing supply where it hurts amid an already dire global semiconductor shortage has exacerbated issues to a dangerous point. Have you seen what happened when RTX 3080 Tis went on sale at Best Buy? People are getting desperate — not for Dogecoin and Ethereum, but to be able to play modern games on their PCs.

You can switch between the old and new Start menu on Windows 11
The recently leaked Windows 11 build has revealed lots of new details about Microsoft’s upcoming OS such as the new Start menu and Taskbar experiences. That said, the leaked build is not final, and there are more UX enhancements and features still to come. One such addition that Microsoft may add in a future build is the ability to return to the classic Windows 10 Start menu with Live…

E3 2021 itself was just a big mess
E3 showed this year that not only is it continuing to lose relevance, but that it doesn’t know how to put on a virtual show.
[ad_2]