A lot of reading comprehension problems around these parts. I said the scale is overblown and the way a lot of people are acting is like every CPU is a ticking time bomb that are going to die.
Please cite some examples of where people are acting like that.
They sell a lot of PCs with them, including in house along with the retail products. It's not in their best interest to create angry customers.
Intel said it would be solved and if not, they could potentially sue Intel (or recoup some of their losses by other means).
The gravity of the situation was more the ticking time bomb aspect, than being inundated. That doesn't mean their numbers were wrong, as they did some curve-fitting and tried to predict their eventual liability via extrapolation.
Plus, if Dell stops selling Raptor Lake i9-14900K and HP or Lenovo doesn't, everyone who wanted a machine with that CPU will just buy it from one of their competitors. Furthermore, each
new machine they sell has some time before it fails. So, the only situation where they would plausibly stop selling them is if Intel said a mitigation weren't possible. Otherwise, they'd be counting on Intel to deliver it before those new machines started failing.
And yet you're defending presuming you're right
talk about a massive amount of hypocrisy right here.
Right about what?
At least my stance is based upon what information is available
No, a lack of information is a lack of information. You can't treat an unknown as implying a negative, which is exactly what you're doing.
rather than using confirmation bias to yell the sky is falling.
It's not confirmation bias, because I didn't go searching for something that confirmed a particular presumption. The data I had seen was from that video, so I cited it. The only other statistical data I've seen is from Puget, but that's of limited applicability for the reasons I mentioned.
Edit: actually, here's another one:
https://www.tomshardware.com/pc-com...have-4x-higher-return-rate-than-the-prior-gen
Yeah, it's only 4x, but the nasty thing about degradation is that
the failure rate will increase with time! So, if we had their precise sales & returns data, we could try to extrapolate it.
If you have other data, you should cite it.
They've been acknowledging issues for a lot longer than 2 months.
As recently as 4 months ago, they were still trying to throw motherboard makers under the bus: