Originally posted by: Gamingphreek
Talk about spreading FUD... There is no separate "consumer level" or "business level" driver because the 8800 is neither specifically a "consumer level" or "business level" product. The 8800 can be used on ANY version of Vista and businesses are free to use ANY version of Vista they feel is appropriate for their needs, be it Business, Ultimate or Home. The same goes for home users.
Creig, listen to me very carefully.
The Geforce series is consumer grade cards. Yes, they can be used in a business/workstation environment but they are CONSUMER GRADE cards. Got it?
The Quadro seris is Professional/Workstation grade cards. Yes they can be used in a consumer based environment but they are Workstation/Professional grade. Got it?
The drivers released for the Consumer based cards will be released in tandem with the consumer based OS, NOT the Workstation/Business OS. In the mean time, if you are one of the rare business owners who has an 8800, by all means argue your case...if not then there is no point in this senseless argument.
Your original argument was that Vista was not available to the general public. I took the time and contacted MS directly and was told that Vista is indeed available to the public right now in 5 pack quantities.
And if you read my post it asks if you have tried to apply to the volume licensing? If you haven't head over and just look at the form and try to tell me that is for everyone. Really it takes just seconds.
And just for the record, I happen to think the 8800 series is quite a feather in Nvidia's cap. It has great performance in XP, draws less power than I thought possible for a successor to the 7900GTX/X1900XTX generation and is available in quantity. Sure there are some driver bugs, but no more than I expected from a totally new GPU.
Thats good, we are all glad you feel that way.....
But that still doesn't change the fact that's it's not Vista Ready now that Vista is available.
I'm tired of arguing this point. Look, MS says the OS in it's entirety is released on Jan 30. You can argue that this little thing is released here, and there is a loophole is available here; but I'm through. You just don't understand what a release date is.
EDIT: even though nvidia's G80 is not quite Vista ready, i though you'd be interested in this possibly related news:
ATI's new Linux drivers already support R600
so ATi is Vista/Linux *ready* ... with the drivers ... just not the HW.
Apoppin it makes no mention that the R600 is in Vista drivers. It says that they have Linux support. The word Vista isn't even in that article! (And yes I searched).
i guess i could pick up 5 Vista licenses and a few 8800s ... if i wanted to really make a *point* ... just to bitch.
Please just go look at the form for VL. Just look and you tell me you can truthfully fill that out without representing a business.
-Kevin