- Jul 1, 2005
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Originally posted by: SunnyD
And the key is that Diamond and GeCube replaced the cards that went out without trying to pass the buck, unlike certain other companies out there.
Also, the issue was with the board and not the GPU. I believe it was a faulty or wrong value resistor, similar to when the G80's first came out and were recalled before hitting shelves.
Originally posted by: hclarkjr
Diamond Multimedia says only 188 cards faulty, not thousands
Originally posted by: AmberClad
Meh. I knew there had to be a reason why Diamond was among the least recommended of ATI vendors around here. As for GeCube, I don't think they sell in the US anymore, so good riddance.
What I don't get is, with all that cost cutting/corner cutting, they still don't sell their stuff any cheaper than more decent brands like HIS, Visiontek, or ASUS/Gigabyte/MSI.
Originally posted by: keysplayr2003
Originally posted by: hclarkjr
Diamond Multimedia says only 188 cards faulty, not thousands
And then:
"While documents TG Daily has seen indicate that Alienware found higher than usual failure rates with Diamond?s cards and ended up returning its entire lot of more than 2600 graphics cards and eventually dropped Diamond as a supplier"
Same article.
Originally posted by: thilan29
Originally posted by: keysplayr2003
Originally posted by: hclarkjr
Diamond Multimedia says only 188 cards faulty, not thousands
And then:
"While documents TG Daily has seen indicate that Alienware found higher than usual failure rates with Diamond?s cards and ended up returning its entire lot of more than 2600 graphics cards and eventually dropped Diamond as a supplier"
Same article.
What's your point? That Alienware decided to return all the cards (even though they weren't ALL defective) isn't a surprise is it? (Most would have done the same as they wouldn't want to test each card one by one)
Based on brief investigation by Diamond, graphics cards were not defective, but were somewhat incompatible with certain underrated power supply units (PSUs) Alienware used.
?After investigating our customer service logs, we did uncover an isolated issue with one OEM manufacturer relating to a power supply being used.
In a recent series of articles planted in on line press, Diamond was wrongly pictured as selling sub-standard video cards. A disgruntled former employee, who was terminated due to presenting fraudulent credentials, reported the story. When this person was unable to solve a very minor problem that affected less than 200 cards, many red flags were sent up, resulting in an investigation and termination. This former employee sent these unsubstantiated stories to inflict harm.
"This is serious business," said Bruce Zaman, CEO of Diamond. "We hired the man on the strength of his resume and a clean criminal background check," Zaman added. "When we dug deeper we found that the person was not who he said he was and promptly terminated him."
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Diamond blames fraudster for card failure reports:
In a recent series of articles planted in on line press, Diamond was wrongly pictured as selling sub-standard video cards. A disgruntled former employee, who was terminated due to presenting fraudulent credentials, reported the story. When this person was unable to solve a very minor problem that affected less than 200 cards, many red flags were sent up, resulting in an investigation and termination. This former employee sent these unsubstantiated stories to inflict harm.
"This is serious business," said Bruce Zaman, CEO of Diamond. "We hired the man on the strength of his resume and a clean criminal background check," Zaman added. "When we dug deeper we found that the person was not who he said he was and promptly terminated him."
It could be a scapegoat or it could be the truth. There's not enough (public) information in either direction for us to determine.Originally posted by: keysplayr2003
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Diamond blames fraudster for card failure reports:
In a recent series of articles planted in on line press, Diamond was wrongly pictured as selling sub-standard video cards. A disgruntled former employee, who was terminated due to presenting fraudulent credentials, reported the story. When this person was unable to solve a very minor problem that affected less than 200 cards, many red flags were sent up, resulting in an investigation and termination. This former employee sent these unsubstantiated stories to inflict harm.
"This is serious business," said Bruce Zaman, CEO of Diamond. "We hired the man on the strength of his resume and a clean criminal background check," Zaman added. "When we dug deeper we found that the person was not who he said he was and promptly terminated him."
Scapegoat possibly?
Originally posted by: SunnyD
And the key is that Diamond and GeCube replaced the cards that went out without trying to pass the buck, unlike certain other companies out there.
Also, the issue was with the board and not the GPU. I believe it was a faulty or wrong value resistor, similar to when the G80's first came out and were recalled before hitting shelves.
Diamond denied that there is a problem with its cards, but confirmed that there was an isolated problem with one system builder earlier this year.
hey..AMD trolls are gathered at one place...it must be true lol...what exactly is the problem if the company WILL replace the cards?hey..nvidia trolls are gathered at one place...it must be true lol...what exactly is the problem if the company WILL replace the cards?
Originally posted by: ViRGE
It could be a scapegoat or it could be the truth. There's not enough (public) information in either direction for us to determine.Originally posted by: keysplayr2003
Originally posted by: BFG10K
Diamond blames fraudster for card failure reports:
In a recent series of articles planted in on line press, Diamond was wrongly pictured as selling sub-standard video cards. A disgruntled former employee, who was terminated due to presenting fraudulent credentials, reported the story. When this person was unable to solve a very minor problem that affected less than 200 cards, many red flags were sent up, resulting in an investigation and termination. This former employee sent these unsubstantiated stories to inflict harm.
"This is serious business," said Bruce Zaman, CEO of Diamond. "We hired the man on the strength of his resume and a clean criminal background check," Zaman added. "When we dug deeper we found that the person was not who he said he was and promptly terminated him."
Scapegoat possibly?