AMD has launched the Radeon RX 9070 GRE targeting gamers looking for 1440p performance at $549.
Specs:
- 12GB GDDR6 VRAM
- 192-bit memory bus
- 3,072 stream processors
- 48 Compute Units
- Up to 2.79 GHz boost clock
- 220W power draw
- $549 MSRP
The main issue is that the card comes with 12GB of VRAM instead of the 16GB on the standard RX 9070.
Another problem is that the RX 9070 GRE launches at $549, the same price as the standard RX 9070.
Since the RX 9070 has more VRAM and stronger specs, the standard model could be the better deal if the price gap is small.
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AMD Radeon RX 9070 GRE Could Launch Worldwide on June 1 for $549
AMD’s Radeon RX 9070 GRE is reportedly set for a global launch on June 1 priced at $549.
While AMD hasn’t officially announced the worldwide release, leaks and retailer listings suggest the card may arrive in markets outside China.
The RX 9070 GRE is expected to sit between the RX 9060 XT and RX 9070 in AMD’s lineup.
Rumored specifications include
> 12GB of GDDR6 memory
>3,072 stream processors
>192-bit memory bus
If the leaks are accurate, the RX 9070 GRE could be an interesting option for 1440p gaming
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BREAKING: If the Wall Street Journal’s sourcing holds, the UAE just became the most consequential actor in this war. Not the US. Not Iran. Not Israel. The UAE.
Here is why this is the tweet of the day.
Dubai has been Iran’s financial oxygen for forty years. Not metaphorically. Literally. Through every round of American sanctions, every UN resolution, every OFAC designation, every European bank exit from Iranian correspondent relationships, Dubai remained the one global financial center where Iranian money could move, convert, and access global trade. The shadow network operating through Dubai’s currency exchanges, free-zone shell companies, and gold trading houses is not a marginal phenomenon. It is Iran’s primary mechanism for converting oil revenues into usable foreign currency, for paying for weapons components, for funding proxy operations from Hezbollah to the Houthis to every other instrument of Iranian regional power. The US Treasury has spent twenty years trying to close it and has never fully succeeded because closing it required UAE cooperation that the UAE, for its own sovereign economic reasons, consistently declined to provide.
The UAE is now, according to the Wall Street Journal, considering providing it.
Understand what has changed. The UAE’s entire strategic calculus for forty years was based on a deliberate ambiguity. Dubai would not be a sanctions enforcer. It would be a neutral financial hub, a free port for global capital regardless of political origin, and in return it would receive the economic dynamism that comes from being the one place money can always go. That ambiguity was worth hundreds of billions of dollars in financial services revenue, real estate investment, and trade flows. It was also worth significant leverage over Tehran, which needed Dubai and therefore could not completely antagonize it.
Iran fired 1,072 drones at the UAE in six days. Iranian missiles struck Dubai’s international air corridor. Iranian ordnance forced the closure of 70 percent of regional flights. Iranian attacks on the Fujairah bypass threatened the one infrastructure node that allows UAE oil to reach markets without transiting Hormuz. Iran did not merely attack a military ally of the United States. It attacked the economic infrastructure of the country that had been its financial lifeline.
If the UAE freezes those assets, it is not a sanction. It is a severance. It is the moment when the country that kept Iran financially connected to the global economy for four decades decides that the relationship has a price, and that Iran has paid it.
Every Iranian proxy operation, every weapons procurement, every foreign currency mechanism that runs through Dubai collapses simultaneously. Not because of American pressure. Because Iran made it politically impossible for Dubai to continue providing the service.
The 1979 US asset freeze of $12 billion was a superpower’s financial declaration of war. This would be the financial declaration of war from the country that has been the last exit from financial isolation that Iran possessed.
Tehran spent forty years cultivating Dubai. It spent six days destroying the reason Dubai would protect it.
The invoice, again, has been delivered by Iran to itself.
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