Ofcourse the 'allegation' is true.
Bothered to google for 'quack.exe'?
I think Hardocp was the first to bring this out in the open:
http://www.hardocp.com/article/2001/10/19/atis_radeon_8500_reviewed/5
3DCenter then did a deeper analysis:
http://alt.3dcenter.org/artikel/2001/10-24_a.php
Clearly reduced IQ.
And how is the choice of words 'interesting'? I'm just saying that ATi had its share of 'dubious' affairs, because some people think they're just the ideal company.
I'm not going to deny that others do it too. I know plenty of other examples... heck, even S3 and Intel have cheated in benchmarks. It's not just nVidia, but somehow AMD/ATi managed to brainwash the internet into thinking that.
Doesn't matter, in my opinion. The driver does not do what the code tells it to do. It breaks API specs and its aim is to improve performance. I call that cheating, whether you can actually see the difference or not.
If an athlete uses doping, but isn't caught, did he not cheat then?
I really don't think that matters here.
If you want to be 'righteous' and avoid companies because of their dubious business practices, then you should avoid AMD/ATi as well.
As for bumpgate... Don't attribute to malice what you can attribute to incompetence (do you know how difficult it is to prove that such a failure exists and is indeed caused by a wrong choice of materials? It takes 2 years or more before the chips even start failing, and not all of them do. I lost an 8800GTS and a 9800GTX, but a 9800GTX+ still works).
Then you'd be wrong. Because I've been saying the same thing from the beginning. If you bother to google forums, you will probably turn up my posts to prove this.
I think that's rubbish. nVidia never was a CPU company, so it never needed x86. Fusion is low-end rubbish, which nVidia will probably not be losing sleep over.
I think nVidia's Tegra move is good enough. The market for mobile devices is much larger than that for Fusion-based machines.
I think for the future, the threat of ARM-based CPUs moving into the x86-based laptop market is greater than that of x86-based CPUs moving into the ARM/Tegra-markets.
Not really. AMD64 is just an extension of x86, and as such, Intel has more control over it than AMD does. If Intel decides that AMD did not honour the x86 license, Intel gets AMD64 'for free' (and speaking of 'goodness of heart', I think we can all thank Intel for not interpreting AMD's split of GlobalFoundries as a breach of that license, because they very well could).