...and here is why I will NEVER overvolt my video-cards.Faulty drivers? Possibly. It happened before.Redfish can attest to that.
Manufacturer: It's called the Halo Effect, my epeen is bigger than your so my product is superior at all levels....Consumer: WOW that's REALLY BIG, YES I WILL BUY YOUR PRODUCT (even though I buying the mid range)
yup i understood clearly what you were saying, your clarification just confirms it...still dont see the "joke", guess we have a diff sense of "humor"i also think you make claims to alot of things that are your personal opinion like "people in the know could care less" and "no one buys a GPU based on who has the fastest card", then review and tech sites wouldnt bother to fart on them when they drop the monsters, and AMD and NVIDIA wont bother to say "i have the fastest card" if it didnt make a difference to consumers... but hey i dont know
Nvidia is working on a Geforce GTX 590 cooling unitA software driver fix was not enoughBy Lawrence LatifMon May 16 2011, 12:42CHIP DESIGNER Nvidia is readying a hardware fix to its top of the range Geforce GTX 590 graphics card amid widespread reports of the card 'burning' under high load.Nvidia released its range topping dual GPU Geforce GTX 590 in late March and while initial reviews put the card on a par with AMD's Radeon HD 6990, reports started to emerge of users burning their cards. A few days after the launch Nvidia updated its drivers to stop users from overvolting the video cards, however a simple software fix might not have been enough if reports are to be believed.VR-Zone reports that Nvidia will introduce a revised Geforce 590 GTX design with new inductors added to the card. The change will mean a new baseplate, the heatsink that makes contact with the GPU, meaning that existing aftermarket coolers will be incompatible with the revised card.If indeed Nvidia does revise its GTX 590 design for a modified cooler, it will raise questions as to why this wasn't caught in the firm's validation testing. With reports that Nvidia is steadily losing market share in its quest to move into embedded graphics, a validation testing failure is likely to damage its reputation.VR-Zone claims that the revised Geforce GTX 590 card will arrive in June and will carry a 502 marking on the circuit board.The INQUIRER contacted Nvidia and a couple of its video card partners asking whether they are working on a revised Geforce GTX 590 design, but has received no comment by press time. µRead more: http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/2071128/nvidia-geforce-gtx-590-cooling-unit#ixzz1MXTXrMF9 The Inquirer - Computer hardware news and downloads. Visit the download store today.