🌐 China Moves to Establish Unified National Computing Network for AI
China is making strides to unify its scattered data centers into a comprehensive national computing network to support artificial intelligence applications, according to data …
A strange disappearance has hit Nvidia’s latest GPUs: most Founders Edition cards from the RTX 50 series, built on the Blackwell architecture, have vanished from the company’s official store, leaving only the RTX 5070 Founders Edition. Previously, when stock ran out, the site would simply display “Currently Unavailable” — as it did for the RTX 5090 for months — but this time the listings have been removed entirely.
The result is that buying these cards has become nearly impossible. They’re no longer available at MSRP, while retailers like Amazon and Newegg are listing them at heavily inflated prices. This strongly suggests Nvidia has ended production, even if no official announcement has been made.
Rumors, which have been growing for months, indicate that the company is preparing a refreshed lineup likely to carry the familiar “Super” branding, just as it did with the RTX 20 Super series back in 2019. This refresh, however, is expected to focus less on raw performance boosts and more on addressing criticism over the limited VRAM capacities in the current Blackwell GPUs.
For instance, the RTX 5080 offers only 16GB, while the 5090 doubles that with 32GB, and the 5070 lags behind at 12GB. Although such capacities are adequate for most games, many enthusiasts argue that 16GB is far too little for a GPU costing over $1,000 in 2025.
According to leaks, the upcoming Super variants may adopt new 3GB GDDR7 modules, raising total memory to 18GB on the RTX 5070 Super and 24GB on the RTX 5080 Super. That would put Nvidia’s mid-to-high-end cards directly in line with AMD’s Radeon RX 7900 XTX at the same price point.
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