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I learned everything I know from the inquirer

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Was this bad press this started by AMD?




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http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=39107

AMD's doing or random?

Basically a group of consumers threatens to sue Nvidea over it's DX10 compatibility claims and bad Vista drivers or is that the case?

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I am the inquirer



In relation to topic, I hope all their houses burn down. I hate pointless claims like this. No one had to buy the cards, you buy new tech, what do you expect?
Running vista is just asking for it anyway. It's just a money grabbing scheme that our society has come to welcome.

Reply to djgandy

If it were true, how would those consumers actually prove that nVidia's DX10 was not compatible? I mean, what application will they use to support their claims?

Also, to sue for bad Vista drivers is ridiculous. If that were the case, every maker of video cards, sound cards, or anything else installed in a computer needing a driver would be free game for a lawsuit when someone believes they have bad drivers.

What is even worse is that they stated: "is that why we buy a Vista Ready product? to debug it for nvidia? no.", but they don't sue Microsoft when the OS goes haywire. They don't sue a game company when a patch is needed to fix critical bugs. They sue for drivers, but none of the above problems? Hmm...

Wonder what would be next? Will they sue HP or Lexmark if their printer drivers don't work with Vista too?

Reply to NMDante

The inquirer is the most reliable source on the internet, they told me so.

Reply to sabenfox

when i grow up, im going to inquirer university

Reply to bfellow

My son will be named "Inquirer"

Reply to The-Darkening

The way I understand it the complaint is that nVidia engaged in false advertising by saying that the 8000 series was Vista-compliant when they still don't have a good set of drivers for the 8000 series in Vista. I have also heard this from sources other than the Inq but I don't remember where.

Reply to fredgiblet

The prob is not DX10, but the fact that they marketed and labled the $700 GTX8800 cards being Vista capable & supported cards, when in truth there were no certified drivers so when installed immediately crashed the PC.
This is not an issue of simply being buggy in a few games.
Also apparrently nVidia did not have drivers nor support, then denied it as their problem causing lots of people to return other components troubleshooting their systems...

nVidia did botch up quite a few simply by making bold claims on thier products....

Reply to RichPLS

If I paid all that money for cards that crashed because of poor drivers, I would be pissed off too. Having said that, I would certainly not try to sue anyone for poor drivers. I can't imagine any judge taking this lawsuit seriously, but the lawsuit might make interesting reading.

Reply to Glacier

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Reply to Blackhawk44M

Quote :

The prob is not DX10, but the fact that they marketed and labled the $700 GTX8800 cards being Vista capable & supported cards, when in truth there were no certified drivers so when installed immediately crashed the PC.
This is not an issue of simply being buggy in a few games.
Also apparrently nVidia did not have drivers nor support, then denied it as their problem causing lots of people to return other components troubleshooting their systems...

nVidia did botch up quite a few simply by making bold claims on thier products....




Word

Reply to turpit

What are you talking about? The Inquirer is by far the best journalism as it can be. It's as divine as the bible.

Reply to chuckshissle

I've seen fresher "news" coming from a bull before when I was working on a farm!

Reply to runswindows95

Quote :

The prob is not DX10, but the fact that they marketed and labled the $700 GTX8800 cards being Vista capable & supported cards, when in truth there were no certified drivers so when installed immediately crashed the PC.
This is not an issue of simply being buggy in a few games.
Also apparrently nVidia did not have drivers nor support, then denied it as their problem causing lots of people to return other components troubleshooting their systems...

nVidia did botch up quite a few simply by making bold claims on thier products....



I'm not gonna be a blind supporter of nVidia's drivers, cause they have caused me issues in the past (though, I don't use Vista), but my main question, after reading about Vista incompatiblity, is who actually was responsible for claiming that a certain piece of hardware was Vista Capable?

Was MS in charge or nVidia? Look at all the lawsuits being filed against MS for falsely granting a computer system vendor (Dell, HP, etc) to put Vista Capable stickers on their systems, when in reality, they weren't.
MS sued over Vista Compatiblity
Now, why wouldn't the vendors be sued? To me, it makes it sound as though MS just gave out stickers to whoever wanted to claim they were Vista capable, just to help sell the Vista OS.

Again, that's just what I see, and this was not analyzed for more than 10 mins. LOL
:)

Reply to NMDante

I think it was started by:

(4) Little whiny brats who complain that a brand-spanking-new product that cost a lot of their parents' money did not work flawlessly on a just-released, beta-quality OS.

AMD already has its hands full with much bigger game in the legal arena (Intel) where they could potentially get a big, direct payoff instead of small, indirect gains from trying to covertly start a lawsuit against a much smaller competitor using third parties. Anyway, the lawsuit looks like as much of a joke as the people who sued Western Digital over the "1 GB = 1,000,000,000 bytes" bit. If it even makes it into court, I bet it will be settled for a free game CD or something equally trivial as in the WDC case.

However, I think this will get thrown out as Windows crashing is about as commonplace as people buying coffee at Starbucks and everybody knows it. Now if they decided to sue Microsoft for selling Vista as a known defective product they might have a case, but all of us know it's defective despite what Ballzilla says (thank you, Fortune.) The court would realize that and throw it out faster than a Microsoft exec can come up with an insult to Google.

Reply to MU_Engineer

My belief is that Nvidia never defined what Vista-ready meant, so if by Vista-ready they meant "able to use the aero-feature", then no-one really has a case, as their Vista-ready cards can certainly do that.

Also by the time the court case goes to trial there will be a new driver out anyway; last time I checked there already was.

Reply to r0x0r
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