I was nice and comfortable with upgrading my GTX260 to a 460 before reading this review. Now I hear the 470 calling to me.
Santa?
Santa?
Thanks for the heads up. Will be fixed in a minute.:thumb:
What totally astonishes me is how NVidia does business. The whole 260 / 280 debacle where upon initial release they were SO overpriced that when ATI dropped the price by over 200 dollars. THEN they gave people the option to get some money back by having to go through a long drawn out process. Keep in mind that they didn't make it overly known that they were doing this, and also that they were only doing it for retail as well. This meant that anybody who bought it a pre-made system was SOL.
Now, just after 8 months they're essentially putting the screws to anybody who bought a 460 - 480 card by releasing what that card SHOULD have been in the first place. They released the initial fermi architecture cards SO half assed because of 1) Their ability to stick to a release date that was pushed back so much people were getting fed up and leaving the green camp 2) inability to live up to the hype first initiated by them 3) lack of caring for customes, knowing that the "REAL" fermi cards would be out later. I guess they basically took a page out of the Microsoft playbook with the whole Vista / Windows 7 fiasco.
Nvidia has just always seemed to be this evil entity to me because of the way they do business and the way they treat their customers in the end.
Don't get me wrong, I have issues with ATI as well... But with recent NVidia "sneakiness" they're the lesser of two evils.
Wait a second here. What NVIDIA is doing is simply good business. Car companies release a new model every year, Intel releases new processors every ~6 months, etc. AMD would have done the exact same thing if they had been able to continue to tape out cards on TSMC's cancelled 32nm SOI process.
How are NVIDIA's practices any different from the ones mentioned above?
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