Originally posted by Asher
This is so stupid, ATI gets equivalent performance boosts by the same methods.
All graphics cards makers do it, all have done it, and all will still do it. It only makes sense to optimize your drivers so the benchmarks are higher for you.
I'm completely dumbfounded why the headlines say "Nvidia gets caught cheating", when ATi was "busted" as well (and even more dumbfounded that people are surprised??)
This is so stupid, ATI gets equivalent performance boosts by the same methods.
All graphics cards makers do it, all have done it, and all will still do it. It only makes sense to optimize your drivers so the benchmarks are higher for you.
I'm completely dumbfounded why the headlines say "Nvidia gets caught cheating", when ATi was "busted" as well (and even more dumbfounded that people are surprised??)
Originally posted by Master Zen
It's not that it's illegal or not, just that it is misleading the customer about the card's capabilities. It may be technically fair and square but it's just wrong. I would not have much faith or loyalty to a company which does that.
It's not that it's illegal or not, just that it is misleading the customer about the card's capabilities. It may be technically fair and square but it's just wrong. I would not have much faith or loyalty to a company which does that.
FAR better idea to get independent benchmarks from magazines and/or websites. HOWEVER, these are done with limited resources, and should not be considered as more than guidelines - generally more accurate than the manufacturer's but still not infallible.
In the UK, direct advertising that compares your products to your competitors is BANNED. One consumer law I think a lot of countries should consider adopting.
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