you arent reasoning very well with that last statement though, are you?
Why not?
Production always needs time to ramp up.
Apparently Fermi's time has now come.
And if nVidia can pull off 512 SP Fermis without modifying the chip design, then apparently the chip design was 'right' all along, it just needed time to mature, like every new chip, especially larger ones.
Heck, if you look at Intel's CPUs... sometimes a new stepping can drop 20-30W off the TDP of a given chip. Simply because the manufacturing matured (not because they had to go back and insert double vias everywhere, or crap like that).
the whole point of saying "they didnt learn enough" is just that. They HAVE been making 512 core Fermis, just not enough to release them into retail.
Problem is that nobody gave them the time that a new chip needs for production to mature. And it didn't help that TSMC didn't have its manufacturing in order either.
The point being made is that Nvidia has stockpiled the full Fermi 512 core chips and will at some point release them to strengthen their product line/image etc.
In case you didn't know, ATi had exactly the same problem with 5870. Initially there were virtually none available, because the yield was too low. Supply is 'reasonable' now (but still lower than the disabled parts), but it took them months to get that in order.
Difference is that ATi had marketed the product at the same time as the lower variations. That's something that nVidia doesn't always do. G92 for example. We never had this discussion surrounding G92, because it simply blew the competition away. Which says more about the people discussing it than about nVidia. Namely that those people don't get it, and only judge products by performance, not by any business or technical strategies that they are subject to.
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