| ▲ | jrflowers 6 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
I like these many posts about how you, specifically, chose not to use any of the available systems to get a GPU that rapidly organized and became common globally during lockdown. The line from “I just didn’t feel like doing something once” through to “My predictions for the future about a different problem are obviously true” is clear as day. Can’t see why anyone would disagree | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | JollySharp0 5 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> I like these many posts about how you, specifically, chose not to use any of the available systems to get a GPU that rapidly organized and became common globally during lockdown. You like the other people are was arguing with are pretending that the options were reasonable. They weren't at the time. Many other people I know thought the same. There was no stock for any GPU except for absolute crap on any of the retail sites in the UK. There are not many options in the UK generally. It is not like the US. As far as I am concerned what you are engaging is effectively gas-lighting. > The line from “I just didn’t feel like doing something once” through to “My predictions for the future about a different problem are obviously true” is clear as day. Can’t see why anyone would disagree If you deliberately want to misunderstand what is said you could draw that conclusion. Which is blatantly what you are doing. The only thing I claimed about the current high price DRAM situation is: 1) It is likely to get worse before it gets better (due to supply chain issues due to current wars). 2) It resolve itself over time and you should be patient and just make your existing stuff last as long as possible. That is how any crisis often plays out and I was actually telling people in my original statement not to be all doom and gloom and just be patient. It will sort itself out. It won't be this year for sure. | |||||||||||||||||
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