Share this article

New AMD Graphics Card Sells Out In Minutes Amid Crypto Mining Boom

AMD's new graphics card is already sold out, a development that comes as cryptocurrency miners seek the latest GPUs to power their mines.

Updated Sep 13, 2021, 6:52 a.m. Published Aug 30, 2017, 6:05 p.m.
GPU

Chip maker AMD rolled out a new graphics card (GPU) earlier this week – and the product swiftly sold out in minutes.

Tech bloggers closely watched the release of the Vega 56, which was released on popular online marketplaces like Newegg and Ebay on August 28. As expected – given huge demand for GPUs by the world's cryptocurrency miners – the vast majority of listings were unavailable after the first five minutes.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the Crypto Daybook Americas Newsletter today. See all newsletters

Also exacerbating the situation are reports that manufacturing issues have led to a constrain on supplies for the new Vega card (which was sold in two varieties) and rumors that distributors may be jacking up the asking price to boost their revenues amid the huge demand.

CoinDesk previously reported that companies like AMD as well as rival GPU maker Nvidia have been moving to capitalize on the influx of GPU buyers who are looking to use the hardware to mine cryptocurrencies like ethereum. Mining is an energy intensive process by which new transactions are added to a blockchain, creating new tokens as a reward int he process.

Even still, AMD isn't banking on cryptocurrency quite yet, declaring earlier this summer on an earnings call that it didn't view the tech as a long-term opportunity.

That said, the company has perhaps quietly worked to improve conditions for cryptocurrency miners that use its product, as shown by the release of mining-related software derivers earlier this month.

Image Credit: MAX SAYPLAY / Shutterstock.com

More For You

Bithumb admits to ‘serious flaws’ that left internal systems vulnerable to potential sabotage

Bitcoin bus (Photo: Olivier Acuna/Modified by CoinDesk)

The South Korean crypto exchange’s CEO Le Jae-won said the lack of proper controls led to the erroneous transfer of bitcoin worth more than $40 billion to customers. Most has been recovered.

What to know:

  • Bithumb admitted that serious internal system flaws led it to mistakenly transfer about $40 billion in bitcoin to customers instead of a planned payout of roughly $428.
  • The error briefly caused bitcoin prices on Bithumb to plunge 17 percent, prompted a probe by South Korea's Financial Supervisory Service and exposed gaps in the exchange's asset-matching and account-segregation controls.
  • While Bithumb has recovered most of the coins, 1,786 bitcoins sold before accounts were frozen remain missing, intensifying lawmakers' concerns about weak oversight in one of the world's busiest crypto markets.