Posted on 07/04/2008 12:12:22 PM PDT by HAL9000
Excerpt -
Nvidia has uncovered a problem with some older graphics chips that shipped in "significant quantities" of laptop PCs, the company said Wednesday.Nvidia hasn't determined the exact cause of the problem but said it relates to a packaging material used with some of its chips, as well as the thermal design of some laptops. Modern processors generate considerable amounts of heat.
To tackle the problem, the company is releasing a software driver that will cause system fans to start operating sooner and reduce the "thermal stress" on the chips. The driver has been provided to laptop makers directly, said Derek Perez, an Nvidia spokesman.
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(Excerpt) Read more at news.yahoo.com ...
nVidia, what has happened to you? First the huge driver problems causing 30% of reported Vista crashes, now this? Sheesh.
Let the Class Action commence!!!
The design culture at Nvidiot sucks ... sweat shop metality
I've ordered a quieter computer.
True that. And also to add to that, although being a big supporter of Vista, that nVidia may not have anticipated the demand that Aero would have on GPU’s as well, Aero really isnt laptop friendly as far as power demands go. On my laptop I turn aero off to add battery life even though mostly I just run Firefox and office apps.
I wonder if these heat problems occur running Linux
distros (Ubuntu, Kubuntu, etc...)?
I can’t try it (no laptop).
My guess would be yes as it is a driver issue, it probably just occurs at a smaller rate due to the nature of most linux distro’s not being graphic intensive on their desktop like Vista, however the internet is the internet no matter what OS it is on.
Well - according to the article - the problem is related to packaging. That means that the company didn’t do a good job of the thermal design on the package. So all the driver does is turn up the cooling faster.
In my experience, this type of thing shows up as flakey devices. You’ll be happily using your machine and it’ll lock up or the video would get strange. Point being that you would have to heat the unit up to see the failure, and it would take time for it to develop - perhaps months or years.
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