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

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blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
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If you make a statement, prepare to defend it against criticism. If I wrote here something like "Crossfire always scales better than SLI" you bet your behind that I'd hear a ton of criticism and that I would be prepared to defend the statement or withdraw it--not that I'd ever make such a statement about Crossfire to begin with. Please don't play victim here, I'm not trying to corner you or make things personal and I'm sorry if you are interpreting things that way. I'm just pointing out what I view as the illogic behind your seeming logic.

You refused to withdraw the statement and instead made a convoluted defense of it centered around your interpretation of what happened, with your opinion that being at the mercy of NV was somehow better than being at the mercy of INTC or going bullet. Even the article you cited to from TG doesn't support your position. At least you admitted that you were not at the bargaining table at the time.

Since you didn't comment on my point about how taking your statements to the logical conclusion means NV is NEVER responsible for hardware failure, maybe you're starting to come around to the opinion that NV was in fact responsible for bumpgate. Good, there is $500MM that agrees.

Your speech about being in the industry a long time is irrelevant in this context; comparing failure rates in VGA cards from a decade ago is not relevant imho, because the market has changed and matured; manufacturing then is different than manufacturing now.

Imho the germane comparison would be what I wrote--hardware failure rates of NV cards preceding bumpgate and ATI cards of the same vintage as bumpgate GPUs and the ones preceding it. And by preceding I don't mean 10 years ago, I mean a generation or two.

Also germane would be to take a poll asking bumpgate-era buyers of GPUs how long they expect the GPUs to last. I'm guessing that not as many people in such a poll would be as pessimistic as you, regarding longevity.

P.S. By the way, my first GPU was a Trident 512kb IIRC, followed eventually by an ATI Rage and the Voodoo 1. Not that it's germane to the conversation. Just reminiscing... :)

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

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

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.
 
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cfedu

Junior Member
May 18, 2010
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I pretty new on the forum, and need clarification. Every laptop I know of has a GPU. So if the laptop lasts more then a year I should be happy to be on borrowed time since the warranty is over.
 

Scali

Banned
Dec 3, 2004
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Since you didn't comment on my point about how taking your statements to the logical conclusion means NV is NEVER responsible for hardware failure, maybe you're starting to come around to the opinion that NV was in fact responsible for bumpgate. Good, there is $500MM that agrees.

I never denied it in the first place (indeed, hard to argue with a court settlement and all that, I'm smarter than that).
 

JSt0rm

Lifer
Sep 5, 2000
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Hey guys, My entire life revolves around the success and or failure of nvidia and amd. I don't watch sports as I thinks its stupid but videocards mmmmmm. It's the most important issue there it.

the above is just a injection of humor into our lives. Enjoy or not but please dont think I am attacking anyone in particular :)
 
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blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
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I never denied it in the first place (indeed, hard to argue with a court settlement and all that, I'm smarter than that).

Earlier in this thread, you analogized BP-RIG to NV-subcontractors. You said BP wasn't responsible but had the deep pockets, which is why it got socked with the $penalties. The implication is that NV wasn't responsible but had the deep pockets and hence why it had to pay $500MM.

I'm glad you have finally stated unequivocally that NV was responsible for bumpgate.

Side note: I objected to the BP-RIG thing as somehow not really being BP's fault. There is principal-agent responsibility, as well as factually how people on board the rig stated that it was BP leaning on them to get things done faster (quite plausible given how leases are structured--I work with people in the oil/gas industry and know a few things about how deals are structured). However, it is true that in litigation, people go after the deep pockets first and then the guy with the deep pockets has to sue other people for contribution. NV could sue others for contribution if it wished. That to the best of my knowledge it hasn't, perhaps says something.
 

blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
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Hey guys, My entire life revolves around the success and or failure of nvidia and amd. I don't watch sports as I thinks its stupid but videocards mmmmmm. It's the most important issue there it.

I get your humor and actually agree with it, but come on, this is anandtech.com. Nobody is stopping you from going to http://boards.espn.go.com/boards/mb/mb?sport=espn&id=index Also, they are not mutually exclusive, there are quite a few sports fans here. I mainly watch the NBA though so there's not much sports for me right now that I'm interested in. :)
 

Scali

Banned
Dec 3, 2004
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Earlier in this thread, you analogized BP-RIG to NV-subcontractors. You said BP wasn't responsible but had the deep pockets, which is why it got socked with the $penalties.

You mean this:
NV is held responsible. That is not the same as them CAUSING it.
Similar situation with the Deep Horizon oil platform today. BP is held responsible, but technically the Deep Horizon platform was owned, operated and maintained by a company called TransOcean.
In the end, the reason why BP is held fully responsible probably has more to do with the fact that TransOcean would never be able to pay the damages, while BP can. It is TransOcean however, who were negligent in maintaining and operating the blow-out valve, which was the actual cause of the disaster. It is also TransOcean employees who were operating the platform. They may have been a few BP supervisors present, but that's it.
It's the TransOcean guys that should have stopped work and replaced the broken blow-out valve, rather than the patchy solution they used... but that would have meant work had to be stopped for a while, and that costs money, and would upset their client: BP.

I never said that BP was not responsible. Read the entire quote clearly, I only use the word 'responsible' when I speak about BP, I never deny their responsibility, nor do I use the word 'responsible' in combination with any other company.
I tried to explain how BP is responsible for something that is at least partly caused (cause and responsibility are not the same thing) by a subcontractor, because that subcontractor was negligent in the maintenance work.

I think it all comes back to you either not understanding the difference between cause and responsibility, or misunderstanding my post (form of dyslexia? You see some of the words, then form your own links between them).
I think it's pretty silly if you've been on my case for all these posts just because you didn't read my post properly.
 
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blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
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You mean this:

I never said that BP was not responsible. Read the entire quote clearly, I only use the word 'responsible' when I speak about BP, I never deny their responsibility, nor do I use the word 'responsible' in combination with any other company.
I tried to explain how BP is responsible for something that is at least partly caused (cause and responsibility are not the same thing) by a subcontractor, because that subcontractor was negligent in the maintenance work.

Edit to respond to your ninja edit: No, the problem is more than that one post, because to some extent it's splitting hairs as to exact causation. If you have to resort to fine distinctions between causation and responsibility, you know you're in trouble (and probably in a courtroom or philosophy classroom). You basically hinge your argument on what exactly "causation" means. NV designed it, told subcontractors to make it, they did, and parts failed. NV was held responsible, even if you can make a technical case that they were not the proximate cause. NV was certainly a but-for cause at the very least. So in that sense NV *did* cause bumpgate.

If you really want to get into a discussion about what "causation" means we can go there, but to me it's irrelevant so long as you unequivocally state that NV was responsible for bumpgate and don't bring up issues of causation as if it that ameliorates the fact that NV was responsible for bumpgate. Because when you do that, it makes it sound like you feel NV was legally responsible for bumpgate but that you personally think the blame should have gone elsewhere. That is the sense one gets when you talk about BP's deep pockets--that they were targeted for their deep pockets rather than because BP was responsible. Especially when you say that BP was "held" responsible for it, i.e., legally. From the context of what you wrote, it seems that you disagreed with that holding. If it's a misintepretation then I apologize, but that's what it sounded like.

By the way your reasoning as to BP-RIG is not necessarily true or factual.

NV is held responsible. That is not the same as them CAUSING it.
Similar situation with the Deep Horizon oil platform today. BP is held responsible, but technically the Deep Horizon platform was owned, operated and maintained by a company called TransOcean.
In the end, the reason why BP is held fully responsible probably has more to do with the fact that TransOcean would never be able to pay the damages, while BP can. It is TransOcean however, who were negligent in maintaining and operating the blow-out valve, which was the actual cause of the disaster. It is also TransOcean employees who were operating the platform. They may have been a few BP supervisors present, but that's it.
It's the TransOcean guys that should have stopped work and replaced the broken blow-out valve, rather than the patchy solution they used... but that would have meant work had to be stopped for a while, and that costs money, and would upset their client: BP.

Also, I haven't been "on your case" for "all these posts." I think you are referring to when I objected to the post in which you basically made it sound like AMD refused NV's generous offer to share PhysX and that AMD was being lazy in asking NV to do all the work:

They actually wanted to support AMD with implementing their own back-end for PhysX.
Problem is, AMD refused.
Apparently the only thing AMD wants is for nVidia to do ALL the work for them, and make an OpenCL implementation.
AMD doesn't want to do anything, they just want a free ride.

You had some convoluted reasoning I disagreed with... AFIAK you never retracted the comment. If it makes you feel better I won't bring it up again, even though I still disagree with your reasoning.

The BP thing and bumpgate was a separate matter that we've not exchanged that many posts about, comparatively.
 
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blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
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I'm not, I demand apologies from you actually. Been hounding me post after post, for things I never said.
You pushed things WAY too far.

Does anyone on this board who has read through this entire thread agree with Scali's statement above? If so, I may consider apologizing despite the rude tone Scali has given me and others on this thread at times. But I will wait and see if anyone agrees with Scali's quote above, first.

P.S. Scali, if you want, I can collect your various allegations against me including that of being ATI biased and trolling, etc. Are you sure you want to go down this road, lest you be the one apologizing to me, instead?
 
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blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
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Post after post Nvidia on bumpgate. It is a valid claim, what is missing here is the lawsuit against AMD.
ATI class action settlement

Nvidia and ATI Settles Price Fixing Lawsuit

Now compare the morality of these 3 issues and ask yourself, which ones are a result of "bad business practice" and which ones is/are "Unexpected technical failure."

Nice find on the first. To the second, I'd add this: http://www.tomshardware.com/news/nvidia-amd-ati-graphics,6311.html

I encourage everyone to read it. Note that NV's exec made what seems like the first move (though apparently ATI was complicit if it paid the fine too):

In another email between Dan Vivoli of Nvidia and Dave Orton of ATI, Dan wrote:

"I really think we should work harder together on the marketing front. As you and I have talked about, even though we are competitors, we have the common goal of making our category a well positioned, respected playing field. $5 and $8 stocks are the result of no respect."

In the same email, Dan wrote:

"Both of us have spent the last three years trying to bring the perceived value of our products up to the level of Intel. The "GPU" category is clean and has served us well that way. We both have increased the price of our high end product several fold over the last 4 years while Intel’s high end prices have more than halved. Creating another category serves to work contradictory to that. How does one cleanly position it versus a GPU and a CPU?? It will tear down what we have both built."


(Bold emphasis in the original article. My emphasis in underline.)

I don't think either company intended to mess up with HDCP or bumpgate, it's just that NV's response to bumpgate was arguably pretty anemic at first, the company at times seemed to be blaming others (including end users!), and there are many people whose hardware died prematurely because of it and won't get compensated. At least the ATI boards presumably didn't die because of HDCP problems.
 
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blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
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Since we are talking about morality, insider trading while your shareholders are suffering through losing quarter after losing quarter.
http://www.betanews.com/article/Ins...r-AMD-CEO-after-IBM-SVP-indictment/1257181368
http://www.tgdaily.com/business-and-law-features/44452-ex-amd-ceo-named-in-insider-trading-scandal

Ruiz was slimy, no doubt, but what timeframe are we talking about? If recent, then he's no longer with the company. If pre-2006, then ATI wasn't even part of AMD at the time (and ATI arguably wasn't even really integrated into AMD by 2006). So there's what, at most a 1.75-year window of time we're talking about?

I'm sure someone will come here talking about JHH and wood screws and such, but I agree that insider trading > wood screws in severity.
 
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Seero

Golden Member
Nov 4, 2009
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Ruiz was slimy, no doubt, but what timeframe are we talking about? If recent, then he's no longer with the company. If pre-2006, then ATI wasn't even part of AMD at the time (and ATI arguably wasn't even really integrated into AMD by 2006). So there's what, at most a 1.75-year window of time we're talking about?

I'm sure someone will come here talking about JHH and wood screws and such, but I agree that insider trading > wood screws in severity.
Have you heard of the term "escape goat?" I will love to believe that he is the only offender. However, he is, in my opinion, just one of the stupid ones who got caught.
 

taserbro

Senior member
Jun 3, 2010
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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.

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.

There are no upsides to resorting to ad strawminems and it is certainly not a technique that's accepted in meaningful debate practices.
People often seem to think that they can "win" an argument (which is especially foolish on the internet) when anyone reading their posts are perfectly capable of seeing whether their argument carry any merits beyond the futile attempt to prove their opponent wrong one way or another even if they have to take it into semantics territory.

This is especially true in the case where someone uses wikipedia factoids to keep up; everyone knows how painfully obvious it is to actual experts when someone with an indefensible stance is arguing for the sake of having the last word.

If your ultimate goal is to change someone's mind, which is commendable if you genuinely believe in your point being relevant and valid, then taking the adversarial approach does not help your stance at all but rather does it a disservice.
If, on the other hand, you are only in it to discredit someone because whatever point he brought forth puts a something you like in a bad light, then you aren't going to convince anyone who didn't agree with you for the wrong reasons to begin with and that would be catering to the wrong crowd.

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.

I agree. However, I could bury you with quotes of unreasonable assertions made with no evidence and hasty conclusions based on shaky truthiness affirmed only when convenient for apparently the sole reason to "balance" out the amount of posts that make nvidia look normal. Were anyone to try and refute one of those, he/she would be sucked into a downward spiral where very soon, he'll be quoted into a technicality.

Everyone is entitled to his/her opinion but nobody is entitled to his/her own facts. I would only expect to have to defend an argument with evidence in the case of the latter, when someone is trying to assert something as fact and hopefully not defending himself by piledriving onto you.

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.

Taking something out of context isn't just putting whatever came before and after those words along with it. To be able to quote someone, you have to understand what their point is; if you someone's quote to make them appear to mean something other than what they originally meant, then it is taking it out of context.

For instance, let me quote you: "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."
Okay. Unless I misunderstand you, you're saying that he's been repeating that he literally wants AMD to act like nvidia which means exactly what you meant to say in this context. Would you mind showing me where he did that without taking his words out of context?
Because it is a stretch from what he actually meant.

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.

The quote you linked doesn't match the post it links to so I'll only comment on what's in the actual posts.

The argument in question can be summed up with (and I'm paraphrasing so feel free to correct me) 'nvidia is evil because they wouldn't do anything to fix theirbumpgate cards unless sued and couldn't compensate everybody on their bad mobile chips' to which people replied 'being sued doesn't prove they were directly responsible for the occurrence and they did voluntarily shell out to compensate a lot of people in the case of the mobile chips'.

I don't want to be pointing fingers but if you erase all of the insinuations and condescending comments, this argument sounds pretty reasonable to me and naturally meandering from one case to another when the former has been discussed to death in this context is hardly changing the topic to dodge a question, in this case the question being "when does such an action ever REALLY cover the damage?" which is answered from applying to ALL cases of actions taken in response to hardware ending up below specs, not just nvidia's.

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.
(emphasis mine)

No he isn't!
He's literally not saying that; he's saying that a fabless company doesn't have the technical experience of pcb process to be making decision on such a low level as deciding which solder to use. He's not even going the next step of saying 'therefore they most likely weren't directly responsible for it even if they did take responsibility when the proverbial excrement hit the cooling device', but only suggested we keep facts with facts and insinuations along with whatever those are worth to you because neither side has concrete and direct proof of what occured and if you take away all the unprovable, nvidia doesn't look any more evil than anyone else.

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.

That's a huge stretch here. He didn't say that nvidia had something to do with which solder was used, he said they could have had a say in it if they wanted to, being the client and all, but aren't likely to have exercised that right because that's not their area of expertise.
I tell my dentist (that's right, the heck with car analogies =P) to use a different type of anesthetic because I know I'm allergic but I certainly don't tell him to change his drill bit size even though I technically could if I had a good reason for that. If there's a screw up and I get an allergy the first time, I could elect to be responsible for omitting to check myself and telling him and he could elect to be responsible for having not checked my med history for common problems but neither of us are directly responsible, and certainly not in intent.

--- 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.

I wholeheartedly agree with you here that hardware shouldn't only last two years by design and nobody should expect it to be the rule but it's slightly missing the point.
The hardware defects mentioned are the exception to the rule. Their hardware usually have no longevity problems and it's not like they were trying to fool anyone that hardware should only last for the duration of the warranty. The point is stuff like this happens to everyone and will happen again and probably to everyone into the business of making silicon chips knows this; when it does, I agree that it sucks but it's kinda awkward to act all surprised as if that should never happen unless evil shenanigans took place.

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.

Define responsible.
We could go to ridiculous lengths to argue that some process engineer in the fab was guilty of not foreseeing a problem based on information he might or might not have access to or that the dude in liaison with the fab didn't foresee the practices and correlated with the specs he gave them. You see how pointless the witch hunt is?

Furthermore, in the case of fermi/evergreen, it's pretty well known that evergreen suffered less from yield issues from being a smaller die and thus does nothing to refute "TSMC brought bad process to both discreet GPU makers". That's something people had no problem mentioning when it made amd look good but seem to forget when it also exonerates nvidia of such insinuations.

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.

So should we assume all bad things that happen to hardware makers are intentional until proven otherwise?
Because by that logic, the ati driver team must secretly be the league of super-villains against productivity.
Imho, there's a reason why most people who've worked in the field adhere to the rule of "never attributing something to malice that which can be attributed to common incompetence."
When I look at this situation giving both side the benefit of the doubt, this whole deal is a lot less dramatic.

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.

His analogy could be called a poor one but it still works in the context that he brought it up as a counter-example of a statement that was way too general of "you broke it, you fix it and anything else is just excuses". That was nitpicky though.

I agree with the rest of what you said. However, it's sad that this level of scrutiny is never given to any company unless it's after-the-fact and only against companies we don't like. If a company simply happens to get lucky for a while, they seem to get a good reputation for the wrong reasons.

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.

Ah where to begin?
Do you really mean to assert that intel shouldn't be brought up for the unrelated reason that they don't compete in the discrete market? Especially since their integrated solutions do compete with low-end discrete offerings which are directly driven by high end technology race, but just on the value front?
Even if it weren't so, his point is perfectly valid that there's no rule saying that in the dynamics of 2 competitors, whether one adopts the other's standards is strictly along party lines. It's not, it's much more complicated.

I'm not going to go into the whole physx issue again because as you said, it's been discussed to death and neither side seems willing to accost the other's arguments candidly. And by that I mean that you know it's obvious why amd can't go with nvidia's standards but don't mention it's obvious why nvidia can't bend over to amd's side; so n the end it shouldn't be hard to meet one another in the middle where nvidia doesn't make physx ati-compliant for the same reason ati doesn't make their cards physx compliant, because it's a textbook case of a mexican standoff both financially and in terms of losing face. That's something where neither camp can be justified with a precedent from another case.

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.

I'm happy to hear more people willing to argue without resorting to personal attacks. Although the paragraph after you said that was kind of an attack.
And while a passionate discussion is only a sign of a healthy forum, it doesn't have to be a contest to win. Suggesting otherwise is really not giving your readers any credit.

You've made some points but still there's a tendency of either portraying someone as being wrong on all counts or nothing and often having to make outlandish claims along with valid points to do so; if anything you'll be far more convincing if you were willing to at least give some credit because while scali might not exactly be on the popular side, he has made far more contributions based on his technical insights and disproved far more misinformation than anyone else I've read from.

ps: This thread is now one reply away from being home to the great tree of text.
 

blastingcap

Diamond Member
Sep 16, 2010
6,654
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I will be lying if I say "That is FUD!" It is more like "Some facts that I can't prove." That, applies to AMD, as well as other big companies too.

I'm not sure I understand your sentence. I was just pointing out that you were implying that there are still some insider traders at AMD, and that Ruiz was just one of many. If that's the case, then analogously, is it the case that NV has insider traders too, and that Chang was just one of many?

P.S. Uh oh, this thread is now apparently home to the great tree of text, now. ;)
 
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Dark Shroud

Golden Member
Mar 26, 2010
1,576
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Something I'd like to point out about why AMD went with Intel.

AMD will not crush Intel in the CPU market anytime soon. Yet they have cross licenseing contracts that were recently amended during the lawsuit.

Intel needs AMD while for the most part AMD does not need Intel. Neither AMD nor Intel need Nvidia.

With the hybrid CPU GPU chips coming outAMD & Intel could actually make a Physics engine to take advantage of the GPU core while using the discreate card. They could use either OpenCL or Direct Compute and it would benefit everyone.
 

Idontcare

Elite Member
Oct 10, 1999
21,110
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I'm not, I demand apologies from you actually. Been hounding me post after post, for things I never said.
You pushed things WAY too far.

Does anyone on this board who has read through this entire thread agree with Scali's statement above? If so, I may consider apologizing despite the rude tone Scali has given me and others on this thread at times. But I will wait and see if anyone agrees with Scali's quote above, first.

P.S. Scali, if you want, I can collect your various allegations against me including that of being ATI biased and trolling, etc. Are you sure you want to go down this road, lest you be the one apologizing to me, instead?

Gentlemen, the Personal Forum Issues sub-forum is over here: http://forums.anandtech.com/forumdisplay.php?f=40

Moderator Idontcare
 

AnandThenMan

Diamond Member
Nov 11, 2004
3,991
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I disagree... The lifetime of hardware is generally only as long as the warranty period. Anything after that, and you're on borrowed time.
This is one of the dumbest things I have ever read. I have hardware dating back to around 1982 that still works 100%, and all the way up to current tech. The complexity of hardware has increased its failure rate in some cases, but generally speaking, many types of hardware can and do last indefinitely.
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...
HAHA even more ridiculous.