Walmart uses RTX 4000 GPUs to address RTX 5000 supply issues

Walmart has begun stocking Nvidia RTX 4080 and 4070 models from the RTX 4000 series to cover shortages in the RTX 5000 Blackwell lineup. This move addresses supply woes for the newer GPUs. TechRadar questions whether such practices will become more common.

Walmart is drafting in stock of Nvidia's RTX 4000 series graphics cards, specifically the RTX 4080 and 4070 models, to fill gaps caused by supply shortages of the RTX 5000 series, known as the Blackwell lineup. The retailer is using these older generation GPUs as a stopgap measure amid ongoing supply challenges for the latest Nvidia hardware. TechRadar's coverage highlights this strategy in a report published on March 20, 2026, posing the question of whether resorting to previous-generation stock might emerge as a broader trend among retailers facing similar constraints. No further details on the extent of the shortages or Walmart's long-term plans were provided in the available information.

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Empty store shelves for RAM, GPUs, SSDs, and hard drives amid AI-driven shortages, with shocked customers and inflated price tags.
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RAM shortage expands to GPUs, SSDs and hard drives

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The RAM shortage driven by Big Tech's AI demands—which has already raised PC prices, curbed AI PC hype, and prompted OEM adjustments—continues reshaping the industry into 2026. Price spikes for standalone DDR5 RAM kits hit 300 to 400 percent by late 2025, with effects now rippling to graphics cards, high-capacity SSDs, and even traditional hard drives as supplies tighten.

Asus has reversed its earlier statement about discontinuing the RTX 5070 Ti and RTX 5060 Ti 16GB graphics cards, attributing the confusion to incomplete information shared with media. The company assures continued production despite supply constraints from memory shortages. This comes after reports of limited availability in markets like Australia.

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Asus has ceased production of the NVIDIA RTX 5070 Ti and RTX 5060 Ti 16GB graphics cards, citing supply shortages amid a memory crunch. The move effectively discontinues these models for the company, though NVIDIA insists it continues shipping all GeForce products. Retailers report the cards are unavailable through at least the first quarter of the year.

At the Game Developers Conference (GDC) 2026, NVIDIA revealed expansions to its DLSS 4.5 technology, including dynamic multi frame generation set for release on March 31. The company also highlighted integrations in upcoming games and new RTX tools for enhanced graphics. Additional announcements covered driver updates and cloud gaming improvements.

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Graphics card manufacturers for AMD are reportedly eyeing further price increases, potentially following Nvidia's lead by dropping 16GB models in favor of 8GB variants. This shift in priorities comes amid ongoing market dynamics in the GPU sector. The rumors highlight evolving strategies in high-end computing hardware.

The U.S. Department of Commerce announced on Tuesday that it would allow Nvidia to resume shipments of H200 chips to Chinese customers, marking the latest move by the Trump administration to ease technology export restrictions to China. The H200 is Nvidia's second-most-advanced AI processor, previously restricted over concerns about bolstering China's tech and military capabilities.

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NVIDIA has issued the GeForce Security Update Driver 582.28 to address vulnerabilities in its Maxwell, Pascal, and Volta-based graphics cards. This update follows the end of Game Ready Driver support for these architectures in October 2025. It provides quarterly security patches through October 2028 without game optimizations.

 

 

 

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