Nvidia in 2024: year in review
Date:
Thu, 26 Dec 2024 10:00:00 +0000
Description:
This year, Nvidias value went through the roof, and new RTX Super GPUs were definite crowd-pleasers.
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Nvidia experienced a memorable 2024 in some ways, and certainly CEO Jensen Huang wont forget the year in which his company finally outdid Apple as the most valuable firm in the world.
We also received a clutch of powerful new GeForce GPUs from Team Green, along with a huge move on the software front too, and, inevitably, AI continued to be a massive driving force for Nvidia.
Nvidias value exceeded $1 trillion in 2023 , but it blew through the roof this year, with its stock heading steeply upwards throughout 2024 driven, of course, in large part by its AI GPUs.
Indeed, Nvidia became the worlds most valuable company in June 2024 , beating out the likes of Apple and Microsoft, exceeding a market cap of $3 trillion. Team Green slipped back a bit as the year went on, but then retook pole position from Apple in November 2024, approaching a $3.5 trillion valuation. Nvidia also barged Intel off the Dow Jones Industrial Average index .
Throughout the year, Jensen was gleefully stoking the AI hype furnace, unsurprisingly . A lot of leather jackets can be bought for the kind of cash Nvidia is now worth, and the swiftness with which this financial rise has occurred has been nothing less than breathtaking.
Is Nvidia going to be the first company to hit the $4 trillion mark? Its a fair bet if the momentum behind AI keeps on chugging the way it has been and maybe Nvidia is even set to become a household name eventually ( something it most definitely isnt yet , despite all this success). (Image credit: Future / John Loeffler) The year of the Super graphics cards
Nvidia continued to dominate the desktop GPU market in 2024, to no ones surprise, to the point of a near-monopoly in fact .
Helping to maintain its momentum here was a trio of new graphics cards for
the Lovelace range which Nvidia revealed as the year kicked off. These fresh additions to the best Nvidia GPUs out there were the GeForce RTX 4070 Super, RTX 4070 Ti Super, and RTX 4080 Super.(And yes, we still cant get over the fact that Nvidia made a Ti Super as a way to jam an extra model into a cluttered mid-to-upper-range space).
These Super GPUs replaced the existing models in all but the case of the RTX 4070, which was kept in production to run alongside the RTX 4070 Super, but
at a cheaper price point (obviously).
Overall, the new graphics cards were welcome introductions and powerhouse offerings, but what wasnt so welcome were the price tags attached to them. In true Nvidia style, these mid-to-higher leaning GPUs were all expensive. Notably, the RTX 4070 Ti Super fell a little short in our review , being rather overshadowed by the RTX 4080 Super, which we declared was the enthusiast GPU weve all been waiting for .
Our review of the RTX 4070 Super also represented a big thumbs-up for the
GPU, and it proved to be our favorite overall of the new graphics cards (even if its 12GB of VRAM limits the cards 4K chops the 4080 Super become the new champ here, of course).
On the issue of priciness, its true that some of these new Super variants got price cuts to a limited extent as the year rolled on, but overall, AMDs mid-range remained the much better value picks compared to Team Green.
Otherwise, we didnt see much else from Nvidia in the way of GPU releases,
save for a fresh spin on the RTX 4070 with slightly slower video RAM . It was effectively the same as the original RTX 4070, though, and a move made by
Team Green to ensure supply remained strong, we were told. (Image credit: Future/Jackie Thomas)
There was nothing to be seen elsewhere, and once again, tumbleweeds at the lower-end of the market. The old RTX 3060 remained a strong seller as a
result the 12GB flavor, with that VRAM loadout proving a definite carrot for some gamers despite chatter from the grapevine around the middle of the year that Nvidia might be discontinuing this model .
Indeed, the RTX 3060 is still the most popular GPU out there going by the Steam hardware survey , with the RTX 4060 making good headway too that graphics card remains our top pick for 1080p gaming (and its solid for 1440p as well).
Despite plenty of rumors suggesting a 2024 launch earlier in the year, we didnt see the RTX 5000 series turn up this year, with the expectation now being that Nvidia will launch new RTX 5090 and 5080 (and possibly RTX 5070 ) GPUs at the very start of 2025 at CES. There was some super new software, too
Broadly speaking, Nvidia GPU owners have had a somewhat rocky relationship with GeForce Experience . A good chunk of gamers with an Nvidia graphics card preferred to just install the graphics driver, and not bother with the companion software, GeForce Experience, at all and Team Green took the hint. In 2024, Nvidia canned GeForce Experience and made an all-new official app.
The Nvidia App (oh, the hours upon hours that mustve been spent in brainstorming marketing meetings coming up with that name) arrived in beta in February 2024 . It was billed as an all-in-one replacement for GeForce Experience and the Nvidia Control Panel, plus the RTX Experience. All these separate pieces were instead housed under one convenient umbrella (where driver installs are handled, too).
The Nvidia App emerged as a full release in November, after being worked on extensively during the year. Nvidia even actively solicited feedback from gamers on which legacy features should be preserved, and more besides.
That feedback was listened to in terms of implementing elements such as in-game frame rate and latency info (plus much more) in the revamped overlay for the Nvidia App, and it offered some smart new features such as easy GPU overclocking. The new app was generally well-received, appears to run
smoothly and responsively in the main, and fortunately, there are no onerous account or login requirements here either hopefully thatll remain the case going forward.
There was one notable niggle that cropped up in mid-December, though, when reports emerged that an option in the Nvidia App could cause considerable slowdown of gaming frame rates. Nvidia is currently investigating that
problem (at the time of writing), and theres a fix (of sorts) for the
apparent bug.
Also on the software side of the equation, DLSS continued to dominate the frame rate boosting scene , and remains a powerful weapon in Nvidias armory
of GPU tricks. (Image credit: Nvidia) AI FTW still
Naturally AI remained an area where Nvidia realized some big successes this year, and as we already mentioned, it helped to drive the companys market value skywards (or moon-wards, perhaps we should say).
Team Green was predictably keen to push forward with new Rubin AI chips , the successor to Blackwell for AI workloads, being announced just a few months after the latter.
Its possible that Rubin, which was the focus of Computex 2024, could power
the GeForce graphics cards that follow the next generation mirroring the way Blackwell has been deployed for AI GPUs and RTX 5000 desktop boards so this could have been our first (sort of) sighting of RTX 6000. (If RTX 6000 ever happens, and here at TechRadar, weve made arguments as to why there are valid reasons to doubt this namely the juggernaut profits in the AI world, of
which there are a bunch of major concerns around , it has to be said). (Image credit: Nvidia) GeForce Now continues to evolve with a catch
Last year was an important one for Nvidias streaming service for PC gamers, with the new Ultimate subscription coming in (offering up to 240 frames per second, and a less laggy experience for those with an internet connection up to the task, that is).
Early in 2024, Nvidia introduced a Day Pass for GeForce Now allowing you to try out the full service for a day, to see how it works for you and then towards the tail end of the year, a big upgrade was announced for the middle tier Priority membership . This was renamed Performance and Nvidia boosted
its visual quality from 1080p to 1440p resolution (with ultrawide monitor support on top), all with no additional cost.
At least there was no financial cost, but there was a catch in the form of a monthly time limit imposed on these subscribers (and Ultimate tier members too). On the face of it, capping play time was a move to help Nvidia shorten queues and keep the streaming quality running smoothly, but it went down
badly with some subscribers, who felt the 100-hour limit was too stingy.
Note that the new time limit doesnt come into force until 2025 starts, and wont apply to existing subscribers until 2026. Still, this led to plenty of threats of quitting GeForce Now on online forums well just have to see if that turns out to be mere noise, or whether a bunch of subscribers are indeed about to exit stage left. (Image credit: Nvidia) Concluding thoughts
In 2024, Nvidia brought some high-quality graphics cards into its Lovelace range, although the more affordable end of the GPU market was totally neglected (again). The company continues to dominate the desktop graphics
card arena, and that wont likely change in the near future especially not at the higher-end where Nvidia wont even be challenged going forward, if the rumors are right.
The Nvidia App was a high point for Team Green and its great to see gamer feedback helped to shape the software with DLSS also helping to build on,
and reinforce, its consumer GPU success.
AI was the massive money-spinner, though, and the driving force behind Nvidia exploding to become the worlds most valuable company.
As we touched on above, the worry for PC gamers might be that the blistering success of AI GPUs if it continues, and it doesnt seem a good idea to bet against that could mean Nvidias gaming graphics cards are eventually side-lined, or perhaps dispensed with entirely. With AMD also looking to cash in on AI, and Intels GPU prospects seeming shakier these days, all this does prompt some concern around the future of desktop graphics cards in the consumer marketplace. You might also like Uh oh... Zotac just leaked Nvidias next-gen launch line-up, including RTX 5090 GPU with 32GB of VRAM We pick the best processors These are the best GPUs
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Link to news story:
https://www.techradar.com/computing/gpu/nvidia-in-2024-year-in-review
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