- Jun 24, 2001
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http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=2065033
I just thought I'd point out that, according to that sticky thread, I couldn't sell my retail EVGA nVidia 6800 video card that I bought new and sealed, retail, at Circuit City. That was many years ago, yes, but I'm sure that this kind of thing happens all the time.
In that case, I bought several for $30 after rebate and started unlocking pipelines to see if I could get extra performance. Some showed artifacts as soon as the extra pipelines were unlocked, others didn't (w00t! free performance!), and one showed artifacts even BEFORE unlocking the pipes. Strangely, the utility showed that the pipelines were already unlocked even though they were bad. I locked them and the corruption went away. Sure enough, I popped off the HSF and saw "Engineering Sample" on the chip. Obviously, it was my property, sold to me by the rightful owners, EVGA and Circuit City. The justification than an engineering sample can never be personal property is wrong.
It happened when HP sent a user an HP TouchPad with Android installed on it. It happened when I bought a copy of Xexyz from Blockbuster Video and found that it was a prototype Nintendo game. We were rightful owners of our property legally within our right to sell them.
Speaking of that, would I be allowed to sell my prototype copy of Xexyz here? I don't know what ever happened to that ES 6800 card anyway.
I just thought I'd point out that, according to that sticky thread, I couldn't sell my retail EVGA nVidia 6800 video card that I bought new and sealed, retail, at Circuit City. That was many years ago, yes, but I'm sure that this kind of thing happens all the time.
In that case, I bought several for $30 after rebate and started unlocking pipelines to see if I could get extra performance. Some showed artifacts as soon as the extra pipelines were unlocked, others didn't (w00t! free performance!), and one showed artifacts even BEFORE unlocking the pipes. Strangely, the utility showed that the pipelines were already unlocked even though they were bad. I locked them and the corruption went away. Sure enough, I popped off the HSF and saw "Engineering Sample" on the chip. Obviously, it was my property, sold to me by the rightful owners, EVGA and Circuit City. The justification than an engineering sample can never be personal property is wrong.
It happened when HP sent a user an HP TouchPad with Android installed on it. It happened when I bought a copy of Xexyz from Blockbuster Video and found that it was a prototype Nintendo game. We were rightful owners of our property legally within our right to sell them.
Speaking of that, would I be allowed to sell my prototype copy of Xexyz here? I don't know what ever happened to that ES 6800 card anyway.

