i have been busy for the last couple of weeks

- i don't post here very much and it looks like the next review after my PowerColor HD 5870 PCS+ review, will be GTX 480 SLI vs. HD 5870 CF and that one will be in several parts and will also cover not only multi-GPU scaling (using 8xAA as a minimum, where available), but also CPU scaling and a dual Core Phenom II vs a Quad vs i7.
ANYWAY, we are talking about *design decisions*. i was pointing out that Nvidia HAD tested 40 nm and decided to gamble as both companies do every time there is a new process.
Which gamble eventually resulted in exactly what I said, a
a design mess, called Fermi. Expensive 3B chipzilla with next to nothing performance advantage, horrible power and heat, negligible OC all for $25% more.
i believe i know Nvidia's design decisions, and as i said, they are mostly public.
I believe you don't and I believe it's a joke to believe it's public...
Yes an article does need to be written about it but it is premature to do so now. Nvidia knew that this might happen and clearly GTX 480 is "plan B". Plan A was more aggressive and would have all 512 shaders and a cooler running core. (duh)the only leftover road to plan B
Yeah, we can call it Plan B - though IMO everybody understands it's nothing but the only remaining route after the complete failure they have experienced with their original, un-manufacturable, dead design.
Yes, ALL of their engineers are proud of Fermi as is;
Well, they saved the company from a stock freefall, of course they proud of
their own work - but they all know it's a leadership failure at the highest level, nothing else, a complete disaster, stemming from the very top.
but they also know it is a work in progress.
A chip that's already out...? Seriously, it's beyond hoorrayyyy-optimistic, it's downright silly.
They are sticking with it and it is the basis for the entire new line-up.
Do they have a choice? Of course they don't. It's here, you have to work with something unless you want to miss an entire round in the mainstream, the bread & butter of VGA sales.
They are reasonably pleased with it but will be working to improve the TDP which will also take care of the noise - and/or allow them to bring out their Ultra. They are bringing a competitive product to market with GTX 260 and GT 250; and below.
That isn't a failure for GF100. Agreed that Nvidia missed their targets and we know AMD also left out things they would have loved to bring us. There is always the next architecture to look forward to from both companies. It gets boring otherwise.
We never questioned their future ability to come up with something better - heck, it's such a hackjob you can only come up with better -, we are simply saying it's a disaster compared to its competitor and NV has no chance without taking it to the next mfr'ing process.
NV has a great pool of talent, it's not a question but I'm not entirely convinced about the Great Leader's ability to navigate NV through the upcoming critical sea changes, the closing market of discrete graphics etc.
I just cannot see convincing enough people to rake in billions from Tesla sales, sorry.