**thread name change* Nvidia and AMD moral and immoral business practices

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Scali

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Why is nVidia being singled-out once again?
I've written a blog about AMD's PR a while ago (and please, note the first paragraph, very important).
If you google for "scalibq amd seriously needs to work on their PR" you should find it.
 
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Madcatatlas

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Theres just too much talk here to go trough it all, but ill start five pages back and wind my way to the latest posts. Keep this in mind and try to read the whole thing before trying to debate or counter this post.

So? Different people have different opinions. Problem is that the AMD-camp doesn't tolerate different opinions.
I've been attacked over and over again in this thread, and then I mean me, not my arguments.
And this isn't the first or the only thread where this happens, and I'm not the only one who is subject to such attacks. There has also been quite a bit of moderation against this in various threads, lately.
I think you guys need to learn how to be more mature, respectful and tolerant.

And stop reiterating that you don't agree with me. I heard you the first time. Repeating it over and over again is not going to change anyone's mind. So stop repeating, and stop attacking people for having a different opinion.


Dear Scali, let me try to explain the viewpoint of so many people, whom to you, come across as AMD fanboys or whatever you`d like to term them, as evidently seen in your "i have been attacked by people, not my arguments, but me".
This is ofcourse a debate technique, one which has its ups, but also its downsides. The downsides are proven well when your confronted by evidence of doing the same thing your accusing others off or just staving off and steering away from subjects which are relevant to the topic, but which you dont like yourself.

As seen by the comments from alot of members, last of them being in this topic by Mem, there are opinions which differ from yours. As it should be. Noone needs to be forced into one or the other. If you like apples, fine. This doesnt look to be fine with you though.

There looks to be alot of posts where your only message, which you reiterate again and again, is that you would want AMD to act like Nvidia, do like Nvidia and be like Nvidia. A few examples to show my points:

Also, notice how i mostly quote your entire message, so as to not have any "your taking this out of context" whine.

That's the impression you're creating by focusing completely on the laptops they didn't replace/fix.
Originally Posted by Janooo
What I am saying it does not cover all the damage.

I think we all knew that long before this thread anyway. I haven't seen anyone claim otherwise...
No need to keep reiterating that.
Heck, when does such an action ever REALLY cover the damage? If you really want to go down that alley, you could argue that just replacing the hardware is not enough, because you may also have lost your work, and you may have lost valuable time because you had to wait for a replacement etc etc.
There's no way a company can ever win in such a situation. You can never do enough.

But let's make this the last post on this subject, and carry on with some of the other subjects instead.



Look here, change of topic and the technique of making your debatent look like he is repeating himself. Reprimanding someone else for doing something you dont like, while doing the same yourself.

Why do you want to change the topic btw? The reason the member brought up that point, was because you compared it to something from AMD and said AMD did worse. Did he prove his point, that Nvidias doing was worse and thus you wanted to change the topic, since you couldnt make a winning argument?


Anyway, enough of that. We can conclude that you lost that argument. here is another.

Why should I even need to do that?
I think it is common knowledge that nVidia outsources all production, GPUs, PCBs, everything (aka a fabless company, they only design the hardware, they don't build it). Which means that whatever soldering is being done on whatever part of an nVidia product, it's not being done by nVidia themselves, but by a third party.

This is in reply to Janoo asking you to name subcontractor which was responsible for the Nvidia bumpgate scandal. Your in reality saying, Nvidia was not responsibly.

yes, AMD and nVidia will probably have had some input on what to use exactly... but especially nVidia has no first-hand experience with making chips at all, so they will just have to go by what the fab advises (and TSMC has made quite a mess of their 40 nm process as well... both AMD and nVidia complained that the final product was nowhere near what they originally specced it out to be. It happens).
AMD may have had some extra inside-info from their own fabs, who knows?
And well, there's still people making decisions. It's all about evaluating risks (we've been over this before).
By the looks of it, either nVidia didn't estimate the risk as highly as AMD did, or nVidia was willing to take more of a risk than AMD was.

Ok, so now your saying Nvidia did have something to do with what materials were to be used on their cards. And lets assume for a second here that one business rule of thumb says that if you can "get away with something, still making a hefty amount of cash and while winning some marketshare, its ok to screw the customer" that Nvidia DID know what was going to happen. Certainly it would look naive in many peoples eyes if you dont think they should know.

--- Your mentioning something about depreciation somewhere in this topic, ill just comment on that while im at the bumpgate discussion: This differs hugely, depending on big business og consumer parts. But it also differs in regions, as in the US versus the EU etc. And within each country there can be even heftier applications of this "depreciation" law.

In Norway almost all electronic equipment has a 5year warranty, if Nvidia doesnt cover it, the store you bought it from will. Everyone sees how these are interconnected.

So, NO Scali, i dont want hardware that lasts 2 years. I want hardware that lasts for as long as i need it to. If im someone who keeps my equipment clean, healthy etc and do everything i can to have Good, Working Hardware, i blood well EXPECT two products, each from different brands, to last just as long. Last i checked, it was not so with GPUs, as it is with Toyota versus Renault in the world of cars (yes i hate car analogies, but everyone is familiar with why Toyota has its reputation)

If in spite of taking well care of my hardware, one part, Nvidia GPU, burns out after 2 years, while one part, AMD GPU, lasts 5, then you better belive there IS a problem with Nvidia hardware and it should Not be occuring.



Not quite, unless some people have a strange idea of what responsibility means.

So, whats it gonna be then? Are the makers of these products responsible or not? The question "who is resonsible, if Nvidia isnt?", was asked and you replied that its third parties.

But you named no third parties, instead you jumped 3 series of cards and ended up at Fermi to reiterated the old "TSMC brought bad process to both discreet GPU makers".

This can be argued to not hold true, since AMDs Evergreen series, although it was available in less quantity than it should have been, still suffered WAY less than Nvidias Fermi. Different architectures ofc and a whole new one for Nvidia, but we`ve been over this before. I think everyone considers AMDs 4770 on 40nm to be the right way to approach a new process node. And in this light people have argued that it IS Nvidias failing that led to Way lower than expected yields, not something entirely or even overly TSMCs failure of process technique.



It's really simple. nVidia made the wrong choice, but that doesn't mean they did that deliberately. They did what they thought was the right choice. Hindsight and all that...

Read the part where I say that many people view this line of thinking as overly naive. Exactly what do you know about Nvidia not doing anything intentionally? Both AMD and Nvidia have intentionally done some shady stuff in the past. Lets be realistic, both companies are likely to act shady in the future aswell.
Hey we are getting somewhere. It seems we can agree on Nvidia making a mistake atleast. Thats a start.


Not really... Why do you think parents are being held responsible for their children?
A big part of it is that children won't be able to pay for any damages anyway, because they don't have an income.
There may be tons of reasons why you can't really make the party that caused it responsible, as I tried to demonstrate with my BP/Deep Horizon example. And I wouldn't really call them 'excuses and justifications', it's just common sense and accepted practice.

But if you want to over-simplify things... fine. Let's not discuss this further.

It seems apparant (to me) that you`ve made a bad analogy with "the kids broke something and the parents are held responsible", I have to assume, since your being this vague, that you mean Nvidia is the parent. Who are the kids? Are you blaming EVGA, XFX etc or are you blaming THE kid: TSCM?

Bad analogy i guess. But your BP analogy is not so bad. Its just weird that you in one sentence call it "common sense and accepted practice" while in another you say its not right that BP should be held responsible since the fault lay with one of their subcontractors.

In business you investigate or make sure that your subcontractors are reliable and if nessesary you include clauses in the contracts that make the subcontractor liable if something goes wrong.
Atleast you do in private busineses. State or national stuff is often just given to the least expensive firm aslong as they meet the minimum requirements.
In other words, BP was held responsible and TOOK the blame. Much like Nvidia i guess, Im not intimately familiar with either case, other than having read it trough the press on both accounts.



Now, let's substitute every instance of 'nVidia' with 'Intel':


That still makes as much sense as nVidia, doesn't it?
Problem here is that reality disagrees with you: AMD did partner up with Intel.
There is your flawed logic.
So my obvious argument here is this:
If, in light of your arguments against teaming up with a competitor, AMD still decided to go with Intel... by that same logic, AMD could (and possibly should) also have gone with nVidia.
Heck, AMD was even fighting Intel in court at that time. At least they weren't entangled with any legal issues with nVidia.


As I said before, AMD just got cornered. They could go with nVidia, Intel or Sony. They went with Intel and Sony... might as well also gone with nVidia while they were at it. I think it's called "Don't bet all your money on one horse".
Your problem is that you constantly ignore Intel in the story (that's why I say you're being nVidia-centric). Ofcourse that's convenient for your flawed logic, but it doesn't quite match up with reality.

I would assume he IS focused on AMD vs Nvidia, guess what read the topic. This isnt about Intel. Intel has 0 discreet marketshare. Intel is not a competitor to AMD in what was ment as the discreet GPU segment. You know this was ment, yet you twisted his post to your liking so YOU could have a shot at him being anti Nvidia.

Intel can and should be Ignored in the discreet GPU market. When the Sandybridge/Lhano or whatever AMD calls their cpu/gpu battle is well started, THEN you can start talking about competition in the GPU segments. Intel basicly owning the integrated market is a topic entirely outside this one.

What exactly is so hard in understand why AMD Can not go with Nvidia? It has been explained to you several times in this topic Scali, that if AMD embraced Nvidias phyxs standard, they would help increase phyxs adoption to 100% in the discreet GPU segment while also locking themselves to their main competitors whims and tech. You just dont do that in business. AMD can run (and adapt) havok stuff on their own processors. Amd can run phyxs on their GPUs, BUT would be at the mercy of Nvidia if there came a time of change in software/code path change.

Another thing that should be taken into consideration is that Intel IS being watched by many eyes for anti competitive stuff. Using Intels stuff is MUCH safer for AMD than using Nvidias stuff. Much safer.

Anyway, the list could go on forever quoting you.

In closing:

There is no need to attack you. Your arguments however and your discussion technique leave you open to harsher than needed replies.

You change subjects when you dont have any winning arguments or when you are proven to have spread misinformation or when you have contradicted yourself or amended your viewpoints to take into regard a confrontative argument from another member.



In one way, we really should get over this. But with the short intervals these questions pop up again, i doubt we will ever stop talking about these companies with our arguments of one being better than the other etc.
Its only natural.
 

Scali

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There we go again.
A post dedicated entirely to me.
And I think I know what the 'problem' is with my discussion technique. I come up with actual facts, links, quotes and logical arguments. As Keysplayr has pointed out a few pages ago, people simply ignore my counter-arguments, and instead attack me.
Here is another fine example.

I see no point in answering the whole post... but I will answer this:

Why do you want to change the topic btw?

Very simple: I try to agree to disagree. I see the discussion going nowhere because the other party doesn't understand my arguments, or doesn't want to understand them... And there really is no right or wrong in such issues, it's all just a matter of frame-of-reference. I merely try to explain why I see things the way I see. If someone then wants to argue over that over and over again, it gets pointless. So I try to cut it off.
That doesn't mean I don't stick by what I said, on the contrary. I just accept that the other party will not even bring up any understanding for my point-of-view, and let it go.
I value integrity very deeply, and I am also smart enough to choose my words wisely, and express what I want to say, and how I want to say it. As such I never wiggle my way out of what I said. NEVER. Remember that.
I may be misunderstood however, sometimes (most of the time?) I seem to go too fast... then again, I am a software developer, so I 'live' this stuff, most of you guys only read about it on news sites and such, and just play the games.
 
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Madcatatlas

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Feb 22, 2010
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Atleast adress some of the points and comments i have. I do have some. But ye that approach is one that you could take. I dont mind. I realise it was a long post ofc, but it doesnt take more than a min to read it trough..
 

Scali

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Dec 3, 2004
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Atleast adress some of the points and comments i have. I do have some. But ye that approach is one that you could take. I dont mind. I realise it was a long post ofc, but it doesnt take more than a min to read it trough..

I've edited the above post and addressed what I think is the main point.
 

ugaboga232

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Sep 23, 2009
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Not to sound rude, but from my reading of this thread, it seems Scali likes to pull the victim card a lot when confronted with the arguments of people who he thinks are "anti-nvidia". Especially the last two posts by scali and Madcatatlas. IMO, Madcat did no attacking of your character at all. Some of your arguments are not logical as you say one thing for AMD but expect another for Nvidia. It is also rude to insinuate that you are the only one using facts, links,quotes, and arguments.

Back OT, Why can't we have crysis type physics in more games? Or Red Faction? Those were quite good for using the CPU. If they could be ported to GPU's with an open format, wouldn't that help everyone? As of now, PhysX brings physics driven eye candy, not any gameplay affected physics (if it did, it would essentially cut the market in two which is pretty stupid if you want to sell games).

In the end, we have to vote with our wallets whether to support nVidia's or AMD's practices. We can show nvidia that they have to have more than the bare minimum in social responsibility. We can show that "friendlier" gpu market can benefit all parties. Nvidia can innovate and be nice as well. I don't understand why people don't want to avoid more bumpgates, TLB bugs, market fragmentation, etc.
 

Scali

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IMO, Madcat did no attacking of your character at all.

He attacked my discussion manners, and tried to make it look like I avoid topics.

Some of your arguments are not logical as you say one thing for AMD but expect another for Nvidia.

Perhaps you cannot follow the logic in my arguments, but that doesn't mean there isn't any.
I may just be going too fast for some of you.
The simple explanation is that AMD and nVidia are not in the same situation, and as such I don't have the same expectations of them.

It is also rude to insinuate that you are the only one using facts, links,quotes, and arguments.

I'm afraid it is mostly true.
 

ugaboga232

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Sep 23, 2009
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See, you just did it again. You do avoid topics, you do insinuate that you are above us in debating and intelligence, and you use double standards. You only replied to one part of Madcat's long post.

You said that Nvidia was not responsible for bumpgate. Consequently that would mean AMD should not be responsible for the TLB bug. Nvidia did design their graphics cards (reference models and all that good stuff) and I would assume either released it on purpose or had no clue. The same holds true for AMD. So either both are liable or both are innocent. Also, not getting your full moneys worth is > having a chip doomed to fail with all its replacements doomed to fail. Also, on my m1530, the 8600m gt can no longer game at any reasonable gaming clock speed without hitting the hard limiter which begins to drop frames. This is exactly what you were talking about with the TLB bug. It's only been over 2 years but unlike you, I expect my products to last.

Explain what you mean different situations? Why don't you have the same expectations?

I think that the other posters and I would appreciate it if you would simply respond to our posts fully without all this extra insinuations of our lack of intelligence.
 

Scali

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You said that Nvidia was not responsible for bumpgate.

I never denied that nVidia was responsible. I merely tried to give a deeper insight in what 'responsibility' may or may not mean (ie: it does not mean "Hey, we know this solder is going to make our GPUs fall apart after a few months, but we're going to use it anyway, just so we can make everyone hate us").
I don't want to insinuate that you are below me in debating and intelligence, but really, you have completely misinterpreted my posts.

Also, not getting your full moneys worth is > having a chip doomed to fail with all its replacements doomed to fail. Also, on my m1530, the 8600m gt can no longer game at any reasonable gaming clock speed without hitting the hard limiter which begins to drop frames. This is exactly what you were talking about with the TLB bug. It's only been over 2 years but unlike you, I expect my products to last.

I disagree... The lifetime of hardware is generally only as long as the warranty period. Anything after that, and you're on borrowed time.
2 years of regular operation for a GPU means that it's done what it's supposed to do. You got what you paid for... Technically no company has to replace any hardware after the warranty period, regardless of whether there's a production fault or not.
A chip that never reaches its full potential, does not give you what you paid for, ever.
As I already explained, it's called depreciation.
 
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ugaboga232

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Sep 23, 2009
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You seem to be just throwing your "deeper insights" around without thinking about it. Nvidia designed the entire card. It knew about the properties of the solder. It may have not done it on purpose, but nvidia used subpar solder in their designs which resulted in the failure of countless chips, and crippled many more (like mine). I know that Nvidia would not do this like you are insinuated that I think (of course nvidia did not just try to be a douchebag just to be a douchebag).

Please be more straightforward in your points. You can't keep using such wishy-washy arguments of how you never denied or accepted the points when you are clearly saying that Nvidia probably shouldn't have the blame. It is somewhat annoying to deal with intelligent people who do this as its sole purpose is to strengthen your position while adding nothing to the debate.

If a subcontractor was at fault, why did nvidia pay the 500 million? Is nvidia really that generous? It doesn't take much common sense to see it was mostly nvidia's fault.
 

Scali

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You seem to be just throwing your "deeper insights" around without thinking about it. Nvidia designed the entire card. It knew about the properties of the solder. It may have not done it on purpose, but nvidia used subpar solder in their designs which resulted in the failure of countless chips, and crippled many more (like mine). I know that Nvidia would not do this like you are insinuated that I think (of course nvidia did not just try to be a douchebag just to be a douchebag).

Since I never denied that nVidia is responsible for the problem, I'm not sure what your point is here, other than another personal dig at me.

If a subcontractor was at fault, why did nvidia pay the 500 million? Is nvidia really that generous? It doesn't take much common sense to see it was mostly nvidia's fault.

nVidia paid because they were held responsible. Whose 'fault' it may or may not be, that's not the same thing, as I tried to explain, in vain apparently.
 

Kenmitch

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Oct 10, 1999
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Although the thread is interesting to read it seems like no matter how much you guys argue most will walk away with their befiefs still intact. I guess it's a place to vent the frustrations or a place to justify your purchasing decisions tho.

It's kinda like the arguement of which came first the chicken or the egg....You could debate it forever and in the end nobody knows or can prove it one way or the other!

Pretty much all companies are out to make money. All companies are looking for the most market share as possible. All companies are out to screw us. All companies are pushing their own products pointing out the downfalls of the competition.

At some point it's just best to stop responding than keeping the arguement alive!
 

ugaboga232

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Sep 23, 2009
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So you honestly believe that nvidia would pay 500 million for something they were held responsible to but were not actually responsible for? I am not personally attacking you. Stop turning every debate into that excuse. You are the one insinuating (rather plainly) that I have no skill in debating and little intelligence.

I don't think there is too much to add to this topic now. It is very hard to argue with people who believe that nvidia is almost always in the right and how AMD is the big problem with the GPU market.

I don't even really care that nvidia had a problem with the solder. It's bad but really, the bigger problem is how nvidia is growing more and more desperate with its tactics. Locking AMD cards out of physx when it works, locking them out of AA when it works, and locking them out of other features that AMD cards can perform. If nvidia continues doing this, AMD might start. This would be the worst case. The market would become heavily fragmented and you would need 2 computers to run games. At least now, when AMD adds features in games, it adds features for everyone. That is a far bigger problem now than what conspiracies each company committed in the past.
 

Scali

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Dec 3, 2004
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So you honestly believe that nvidia would pay 500 million for something they were held responsible to but were not actually responsible for? I am not personally attacking you. Stop turning every debate into that excuse. You are the one insinuating (rather plainly) that I have no skill in debating and little intelligence.

Where did I say that nVidia was NOT responsible?
That is the whole problem here. You argue with broken logic.
You ask me to defend things that I never said, and in fact are the OPPOSITE of what I said. I have always said that nVidia is responsible. In fact, I have done so even in my previous post. I'm not trying to insinuate anything, but this is how it is.
 
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Idontcare

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Oct 10, 1999
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Although the thread is interesting to read it seems like no matter how much you guys argue most will walk away with their befiefs still intact. I guess it's a place to vent the frustrations or a place to justify your purchasing decisions tho.

It's kinda like the arguement of which came first the chicken or the egg....You could debate it forever and in the end nobody knows or can prove it one way or the other!

Pretty much all companies are out to make money. All companies are looking for the most market share as possible. All companies are out to screw us. All companies are pushing their own products pointing out the downfalls of the competition.

At some point it's just best to stop responding than keeping the arguement alive!

From a psychological standpoint it is healthy to talk it out.

However it is not healthy to make it personal or take it personal. (not accusing you of anything, just "thinking out loud" here)

I'll admit it doesn't work for everybody. But if this thread has helped even one forum member get something off their chest and feel a little bit better about VC&G life then I'd count it as a success.

Kübler-Ross ftw
 

Kenmitch

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Oct 10, 1999
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From a psychological standpoint it is healthy to talk it out.

However it is not healthy to make it personal or take it personal. (not accusing you of anything, just "thinking out loud" here)

I'll admit it doesn't work for everybody. But if this thread has helped even one forum member get something off their chest and feel a little bit better about VC&G life then I'd count it as a

I can understand the point of this exercise and I didn't see it as a personal attack.
 

Scali

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The chicken and egg problem is actually quite simple.
Chickens have evolved from earlier egg-laying creatures, hence the egg existed before the chicken.

If you want to go down the alley of "yea, but we're talking about a chicken's egg", then you enter a debate on the definition of words. Is a "chicken's egg" an egg laid by a chicken? Then the chicken has to be first. Is the "chicken's egg" an egg that produces a chicken, then the egg was first.

It's really simple.
 
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You gotta take it in context, not out of context. Taking things out of context is a powerful skill with trolls lately.

Obviously its which came first? a chicken or a chicken's egg?

Its not really that simple.


We do not call out fellow forum colleagues "trolls" in the technical sub-forums.

That is a personal attack and is not acceptable.

Moderator Idontcare.
 
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Scali

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You gotta take it in context, not out of context. Taking things out of context is a powerful skill with trolls lately.

Obviously its which came first? a chicken or a chicken's egg?

Its not really that simple.

Not reading more than two lines of a post is as well.
 

blastingcap

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Sep 16, 2010
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The lifetime of hardware is generally only as long as the warranty period. Anything after that, and you're on borrowed time.

What the heck? Is there even one other person on here who agrees with this statement? If this were true I guess I better prepare for half of my elecronics to die suddenly and take it with a grin, because hey, you know, we should expect gear to last only as long as the warranty! :rolleyes:

Does my hardware magically gain quality if I get an extended warranty? :p
 
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Scali

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What the heck? Is there even one other person on here who agrees with this statement? If this were true I guess I better prepare for half of my elecronics to die suddenly and take it with a grin, because hey, you know, we should expect gear to last only as long as the warranty! :rolleyes: Does my hardware magically gain quality if I get an extended warranty? :p

You know, you should really stop pulling things out of context. It's getting annoying.
I know you hate me, and I don't care. But stop derailing threads because of it.
 

blastingcap

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You know, you should really stop pulling things out of context. It's getting annoying.
I know you hate me, and I don't care. But stop derailing threads because of it.

Actually it's you who made up a glib short entry without logic to back it up (AMD being the lazy ungrateful jerk in refusing NV's oh-so-generous offer), then spends pages defending the original statement since you didn't give the context. And you talk about taking stuff out of context?

Stop making this personal, and it's hilarious that you're accusing ME of thread derails. Hi pot. I don't hate you, I just think your position is ludicrous. Your argument only works for those consumers who expected their cards to die at warranty's end, but I think many/most/almost-all of us have come to expect video cards to last longer than a year or two (the length of many companies' warranties at the time), since previous iterations of NV cards lasted far longer. From a legal standpoint you're right, but it's bad business and quickly destroys goodwill. And who the heck are you to tell people that it's not a big deal if their video dies in a couple of years? I think it's up to the consumers whether they feel it's a big deal or not.
 

blastingcap

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Sep 16, 2010
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nVidia paid because they were held responsible. Whose 'fault' it may or may not be, that's not the same thing, as I tried to explain, in vain apparently.

NV doesn't have its own manufacturing facilities.

Thus using your logic and the fact above, if there is ever any NV hardware defect it must be someone else's fault, not NV's. No matter if the manufacturer was following NV's specifications to the letter. :rolleyes:

Also note this fact: during the bumpgate era, ATI GPUs didn't die prematurely at NV-like rates.
 

Scali

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Dec 3, 2004
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Actually it's you who made up a glib short entry without logic to back it up (AMD being the lazy ungrateful jerk in refusing NV's oh-so-generous offer), then spends pages defending the original statement since you didn't give the context. And you talk about taking stuff out of context?

No, it's more like you seem to get some kind of sick enjoyment out of repeating the same over and over again.

Stop making this personal

You're making it personal by your constant attempts to corner me. Take a hint and just back off.

And who the heck are you to tell people that it's not a big deal if their video dies in a couple of years?

I know you're just trying to troll me, but I'll humour you anyway... not for you, but for the others.
I never said it's not a big deal. Thing is, I'm probably the most experienced guy around here, been working with computers since before VGA cards were even invented... and I work as a graphics software engineer professionally.
I think it's pretty safe to say that I've probably seen and used more videocards than 90% of the users on this forum.

Now, with my long-term experience with videocards I have often had cards die on me. As I have already mentioned earlier.
As we all know, they're mostly cards that are cheaply manufactured in Taiwan or somesuch, and they can be quite flaky. That's just how consumer videocards are, even the best of them. Bumpgate or no bumpgate, over the past 25 years I've had a LOT of videocards die on me. They're just among the least reliable parts inside your computer. Made to be as cheap as possible, and pushed to the limit (and beyond) with their clockspeeds, temperatures and all that.

So I'm just trying to be nice, share my experience, and prepare the not-so-experienced users for the imminent death of their videocards. I would say that statistically my videocards don't last more than 3-4 years (heck, I've even had a Matrox G200 die on me! A Matrox, of all brands!). Some of them may live longer, if I'm lucky... Some die quicker.
So when talking about videocards, yes, after years of experience I'm saying you're basically lucky if you make it through the warranty period without a problem.
 

Gikaseixas

Platinum Member
Jul 1, 2004
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blastingcap that's another one of his tricks, telling everyone how experienced he is in the inbdustry. In our little argument i laid exactly the same things you did to him in this thread but it's quite sad that he hates AMD as a company. Watch he's going to come with his next defence line "i owned a ATI card till last month and bla bla...

Scali how can you say that TLB bug is worse than the Bump affair??? At least the cpu worked and 99% of the users never experienced problems from it. In Nv's case the gpu just stopped working even if after 2 or 3 years. How's that not worse???

Get a life